Showing posts with label Health Care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health Care. Show all posts

Monday, November 20, 2017

Casey Mulligan's latest study on the labor market effects of the Affordable Care Act

From University of Chicago's Casey Mulligan, a new paper titled, "The Employer Penalty, Voluntary Compliance, and the Size Distribution of Firms: Evidence from a Survey of Small Businesses."

Abstract: 
A new survey of 745 small businesses shows little change in the size distribution of businesses between 2012 and 2016, except among businesses with 40-74 employees, in a way that is closely related to whether they offer health insurance coverage.  Using measures of both size and voluntary regulatory compliance, the paper links these changes to the Affordable Care Act's employer mandate.  Between 28,000 and 50,000 businesses nationwide appear to be reducing their number of full-time-equivalent employees to below 50 because of that mandate.  This translates to roughly
250,000 positions eliminated from those businesses. 
The gated paper is available at the National Bureau of Economic Research.


A look at the MA jobs picture for October 2017

Source: Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development, Author's calculations.

Monday, July 17, 2017

Retail urgent care: It helps

A new working paper from Diane Alexander, Janet Currie, Molly Schnell examines a much-needed innovation in health care deliveries: 
Retail clinics are an innovation that has the potential to improve competition in health care markets. We use the universe of emergency room (ER) visits in New Jersey from 2006-2014 to examine the impact of retail clinics on ER usage. We find significant effects of retail clinics on ER visits for both minor and preventable conditions; Residents residing close to an open clinic are 4.1-12.3 percent less likely to use an ER for these conditions. Our estimates suggest annual cost savings from reduced ER usage of over $70 million if retail clinics were made readily available across New Jersey.
A few years ago, Boston Mayor Menino prevented the opening of such "minute clinics" at CVS stores primarily to protect Boston Medical Center and community health centers. There's a public choice lesson to be learned.

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

WalletHub: 2017’s Best & Worst States for Children’s Health Care

What is interesting are the results for New Hampshire a state in which the social safety net is small compared to a state like Massachusetts.

Source: WalletHub

Indicators

Test