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Author(s)

David Dranove

Daniel Kessler

Mark McClellan

Mark Satterthwaite

Health care report cards may address important information asymmetries in markets for health care, but they may also give doctors and hospitals incentives to decline to treat more difficult, severely ill patients. Whether report cards are good for patients and for society depends on whether financial and health benefits outweigh their costs in terms of the quantity, quality, and appropriateness of medical treatment that they induce. Using national data on Medicare patients at risk for cardiac surgery, we find that cardiac surgery report cards in New York and Pennsylvania led both to selection behavior by providers and to improved matching of patients with hospitals. On net, this led to higher levels of resource use and to worse health outcomes, particularly for sicker patients.
Date Published: 2003
Citations: Dranove, David, Daniel Kessler, Mark McClellan, Mark Satterthwaite. 2003. Is More Information Better? The Effects of Report Cards on Health Care Providers. Journal of Political Economy. (3)555-588.