T
Tina Highfill
Researcher at Bureau of Economic Analysis
Publications - 20
Citations - 860
Tina Highfill is an academic researcher from Bureau of Economic Analysis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 18 publications receiving 695 citations. Previous affiliations of Tina Highfill include Virginia Commonwealth University & Government of the United States of America.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
US Spending on Personal Health Care and Public Health, 1996-2013.
Joseph L Dieleman,Ranju Baral,Maxwell Birger,Anthony L. Bui,Anne Bulchis,Abigail Chapin,Hannah Hamavid,Cody Horst,Elizabeth Johnson,Jonathan C. Joseph,Rouselle F. Lavado,Liya Lomsadze,Alex Reynolds,Ellen Squires,Madeline Campbell,Brendan DeCenso,Daniel Dicker,Abraham D. Flaxman,Rose Gabert,Tina Highfill,Mohsen Naghavi,Noelle Nightingale,Tara Templin,Martin Tobias,Theo Vos,Christopher J L Murray +25 more
TL;DR: Modeled estimates of US spending on personal health care and public health showed substantial increases from 1996 through 2013; with spending on diabetes, ischemic heart disease, and low back and neck pain accounting for the highest amounts of spending by disease category.
Journal ArticleDOI
Productivity and quality of hospitals that joined the Medicare Shared Savings Accountable Care Organization Program
Tina Highfill,Yasar A. Ozcan +1 more
TL;DR: Hospitals that joined Medicare's ACO Program were found to be more productive than non-ACO hospitals between 2008 and 2012, driven entirely by gains in technical efficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI
Measuring the U.S. outdoor recreation economy, 2012–2016
Tina Highfill,Connor Franks +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarized the methodology and results of newly-released federal statistics describing the U.S. outdoor recreation economy. And they provided for the first time a comprehensive and consistent measure of the value of outdoor recreational activities to the US economy.
ReportDOI
Calculating Disease-Based Medical Care Expenditure Indexes for Medicare Beneficiaries: A Comparison of Method and Data Choices
Anne E. Hall,Tina Highfill +1 more
TL;DR: This paper compares two data sources and two different methods for calculating expenditure indexes for the Medicare population and finds that when the methods are applied to the same datasets, the primary diagnosis method produces higher average annual aggregate growth rates.
ReportDOI
Accounting for Firm Heterogeneity within U.S. Industries: Extended Supply-Use Tables and Trade in Value Added using Enterprise and Establishment Level Data
James Fetzer,Tina Highfill,Kassu W. Hossiso,Thomas F. Howells,Erich H. Strassner,Jeffrey A. Young +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present experimental tables created by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis comparing industry-specific shares of the components of total output of globally engaged firms located in the United States that were part of a multinational enterprise with those of firms that are part of an enterprise entirely located in United States.