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Journal ArticleDOI

The Internal Organization of Hospitals: Some Economic Implications

Jeffrey E. Harris
- 01 Jan 1977 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 2, pp 467-482
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TLDR
A rational public policy toward hospitals requires a change in the internal organization of the hospital itself, which is actually two separate firms -- a medical staff and an administration.
Abstract
This paper investigates the economic implications of the hospital's internal organizations structure. It concludes: (1) The hospital is actually two separate firms -- a medical staff (or demand division) and an administration (or supply division). Each half of the organization has its own managers, objectives, pricing strategies and constraints. (2) Within this dual organization, the medical staff and administration have devised a complicated system of nonprice allocative rules. (3) This internal allocative scheme is subject to repeated breakdowns, especially when the medical staff's internal demands exceed the short-run capacity supplied by the administration. (4) Our current regulatory policy toward hospitals is almost exclusively directed at the supply side of the organization. Unless we revise our definition of "hospital" to include the doctor part of the firm, this policy is doomed to failure. (5) Ultimately, a rational public policy toward hospitals requires a change in the internal organization of the hospital itself.

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The impact of hospital market structure on patient volume, average length of stay, and the cost of care.

TL;DR: Under the retrospective reimbursement system in place at the time, hospitals in more competitive environments exhibited significantly higher costs of production than did those in less competitive environments.
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An Institutional Theory Perspective on the DRG Framework, Case-Mix Accounting Systems and Health-Care Organizations

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Medicare upcoding and hospital ownership

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Presenting Structural Innovation in an Institutional Environment: Hospitals' Use of Impression Management:

TL;DR: In this paper, the first organizations to abandon an institutionalized, taken-for-granted structure and adopt a radically different form presented the innovation to important stakeholders in the market.
References
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Journal Article

Uncertainty and the Welfare Economics of Medical Care

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the way in which the operation of the medical-care industry and the efficacy with which it satisfies the needs of society differ from a norm, and the most obvious distinguishing characteristics of an individual's demand for medical services is that it is not steady in origin as, for example, for food or clothing but is irregular and unpredictable.
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TL;DR: The authors derives and tests some implications about differences in behavior resulting from differences in property right arrangements, and in particular, between proprietary for-profit and non-proprietary not-for-profit hospitals.
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