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Arleen Leibowitz
Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles
Publications - 174
Citations - 11327
Arleen Leibowitz is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicaid & Health care. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 169 publications receiving 10917 citations. Previous affiliations of Arleen Leibowitz include RAND Corporation & United States Department of Labor.
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Health insurance and the demand for medical care: evidence from a randomized experiment.
Willard G. Manning,Joseph P. Newhouse,Naihua Duan,Emmett B. Keeler,Arleen Leibowitz,M S Marquis +5 more
TL;DR: This work estimates how cost sharing, the portion of the bill the patient pays, affects the demand for medical services and rejects the hypothesis that less favorable coverage of outpatient services increases total expenditure.
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Home Investments in Children
TL;DR: In this article, Hansen, Weisbrod, and Scanlon showed that IQ measures are related to human capital inputs in early childhood as well as to inherent genetic ability, and used them as a measure of ability and schooling.
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Some Interim Results from a Controlled Trial of Cost Sharing in Health Insurance
Joseph P. Newhouse,Willard G. Manning,Carl N. Morris,Larry L. Orr,Naihua Duan,Emmett B. Keeler,Arleen Leibowitz,Kent H. Marquis,M. Susan Marquis,Charles E. Phelps,Robert H. Brook +10 more
TL;DR: Interim results indicate that persons fully covered for medical services spend about 50 per cent more than do similar persons with income-related catastrophe insurance, which leads to more people using services and to more services per user.
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The Care of HIV-Infected Adults in the United States
Samuel A. Bozzette,Sandra H. Berry,Naihua Duan,M R Frankel,M R Frankel,Arleen Leibowitz,Arleen Leibowitz,D Lefkowitz,Carol-Ann Emmons,J W Senterfitt,Marc L. Berk,Sally C. Morton,Martin F. Shapiro,Martin F. Shapiro +13 more
TL;DR: It is found that most HIV-infected adults who were receiving medical care had advanced disease, and the patient population was disproportionately male, black, and poor.
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A Controlled Trial of the Effect of a Prepaid Group Practice on Use of Services
TL;DR: The lower rate of use that the authors observed, along with comparable reductions found in non-controlled studies by others, suggests that the style of medicine at prepaid group practices is markedly less "hospital-intensive" and, consequently, less expensive.