The Role of Hospital and Market Characteristics in Invasive Cardiac Service Diffusion

Little is known about how the adoption and diffusion of medical innovation is related to and influenced by market characteristics such as competition. The particular complications that are involved in investigating these relationships in the health care sector may explain the dearth of research. We...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review of industrial organization 2018-08, Vol.53 (1), p.81-115
Hauptverfasser: Horwitz, Jill R., Hsuan, Charleen, Nichols, Austin
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creator Horwitz, Jill R.
Hsuan, Charleen
Nichols, Austin
description Little is known about how the adoption and diffusion of medical innovation is related to and influenced by market characteristics such as competition. The particular complications that are involved in investigating these relationships in the health care sector may explain the dearth of research. We examine three invasive cardiac services: diagnostic angiography, percutaneous coronary interventions, and coronary artery bypass grafting. We document the relationship between the adoption by hospitals of these three invasive cardiac services and the characteristics of the hospitals, their markets, and the interactions among them, from 1997 to 2014. The results show that the probability of hospitals’ adopting a new cardiac service depends on competition in two distinct ways: (1) hospitals are substantially more likely to adopt an invasive cardiac service if competitor hospitals also adopt new services; and (2) hospitals are less likely to adopt a new service if a larger fraction of the nearby population already has geographic access to the service at a nearby hospital. The first effect is stronger, leading to the net effect that hospitals duplicate rather than expand access to care. In addition, for-profit hospitals are considerably more likely to adopt these cardiac services than are either nonprofit or government-owned hospitals. Nonprofit hospitals in high-penetration, for-profit markets are also more likely to adopt them relative to other nonprofits. These results suggest that factors other than medical need—such as a medical arms race—partially explain technological adoption.
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The particular complications that are involved in investigating these relationships in the health care sector may explain the dearth of research. We examine three invasive cardiac services: diagnostic angiography, percutaneous coronary interventions, and coronary artery bypass grafting. We document the relationship between the adoption by hospitals of these three invasive cardiac services and the characteristics of the hospitals, their markets, and the interactions among them, from 1997 to 2014. The results show that the probability of hospitals’ adopting a new cardiac service depends on competition in two distinct ways: (1) hospitals are substantially more likely to adopt an invasive cardiac service if competitor hospitals also adopt new services; and (2) hospitals are less likely to adopt a new service if a larger fraction of the nearby population already has geographic access to the service at a nearby hospital. 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subjects Access
Adoption of innovations
Angiography
Arms race
Competition
Coronary vessels
Demographics
Economics
Economics and Finance
Health care access
Health care industry
Health services
Heart surgery
Hospitals
Industrial Organization
Innovations
Invasive
Markets
Medical imaging
Medical technology
Microeconomics
Nonprofit hospitals
Nonprofit organizations
Patients
Penetration
Prices
Private sector
Profit margins
Race
Technology adoption
title The Role of Hospital and Market Characteristics in Invasive Cardiac Service Diffusion
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