Options analysis of managed care contracting and regulation: theory and evidence

Health Serv Manage Res. 2000 Aug;13(3):170-7. doi: 10.1177/095148480001300305.

Abstract

Managed care contracts can be represented as bundles of options. In particular, the managed care provider is short a call option. To hedge the risk involved in such contracts, managed care contractors can construct several types of virtual put options, among them the ownership of facilities. Agency theory and options theory suggest that for-profit managed care plans, in the presence of debt, will engage in less hedging activity than will other managed care plans. Here, the authors test that hypothesis, using data for Florida HMOs in 1995, and they reject the null hypothesis. That managed care organizations act as if they are short a call option raises interesting regulatory issues, including the possibility of using a hedge-based regulatory scheme in place of a net-worth-based scheme.

MeSH terms

  • Contract Services / economics*
  • Contract Services / organization & administration
  • Data Collection
  • Financial Management / methods*
  • Health Facilities, Proprietary / economics
  • Health Facilities, Proprietary / organization & administration
  • Health Services Research
  • Managed Care Programs / economics*
  • Managed Care Programs / organization & administration
  • Ownership
  • Risk Sharing, Financial*
  • Terminology as Topic
  • United States