Scale and quality in Nordic hospitals

Authors

  • Sverre A.C. Kittelsen Frisch Centre
  • Kjartan Sarheim Anthun SINTEF Health Research and NTNU, Trondheim
  • Unto Häkkinen National Institute for Health and Welfare, Helsinki
  • Marie Kruse University of Southern Denmark, Odense
  • Clas Rehnberg Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5617/njhe.4801

Keywords:

hospitals, international comparisons, quality, performance, SFA, economies of scale

Abstract

Empirical analysis of hospitals in production economics often find little or no evidence of scale economies and quite small optimal sizes. Medical literature on the other hand provides evidence of better results for hospitals with a large volume of similar procedures. Based on a sample of Nordic hospitals and patients, we have examined whether the inclusion of quality variables in the production models changes estimates of scale elasticity. A sample of 58 million patient records from 2008 and 2009 in 149 hospitals in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden were collected. Patient data DRG-points were aggregated into 3 outputs (medical inpatients, surgical inpatients and outpatients) and linked to operating costs for 292 observations. The patient data were used to calculate quality indicators on emergency readmissions and mortality within 30 days, adjusted for age, gender, comorbidities, hospital transfers and DRG using DRG-specific logistic regressions.

The hypothesis that the elasticity of scale increases when quality variables are included was tested against the null hypothesis of no change in the scale elasticity. The observations were used to estimate a cost function using Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA). Country dummies as well as dummies for University hospitals, capital city hospitals and the average travelling time for the patients were included as environmental variables. The estimated scale elasticities did not change with the inclusion of quality indicators in any of the tested models. This may be because medical volume effects are confined to few patient groups or possibly even offset by effects on other groups, where quality is reduced by volume. In one model, the scale elasticity was significantly larger than 1.0, a result that contradicts previous studies which have found decreasing returns.

 

Published: Online October 2018. In print Janury 2019.

Author Biographies

Sverre A.C. Kittelsen, Frisch Centre

Senior Research Fellow

Unto Häkkinen, National Institute for Health and Welfare, Helsinki

Centre for Health and Social Economics CHESS

Marie Kruse, University of Southern Denmark, Odense

COHERE

Clas Rehnberg, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm

Medical Management Centre

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Published

2018-10-26