Background: It remains widely debated whether chargemaster price markups are tied to hospital profitability.
Objective: To evaluate the effect of chargemaster markups on hospital profitability in the presence of unobserved hospital-specific (time-invariant) confounders, and cross-sectional dependence due to latent (common) policy shocks.
Design: We use interactive fixed effects methods to address concerns of unobserved hospital-specific (time-invariant) confounders, and cross-sectional dependence.
Setting: US acute care hospitals, 1996 through 2017 (ie, 22 y).
Participants: Using primarily Medicare cost report data, we construct an unbalanced panel of 3499 acute care hospitals per year, or a total of 76,972 hospital-year observations.
Measurements: Chargemaster markups (above cost), profits per hospital inpatient discharge.
Results: Between 1996 and 2017, chargemaster markups increased (on average) by 155%, and the SD of the chargemaster markup distribution increased by 324%-indicating growing variability in the average markup strategies pursued by hospitals. Our preferred model specification implies that a unit increase of the hospital chargemaster markup is associated with a $261 ( P <0.01; 95% confidence interval: $232-$291) increase in profits per hospital inpatient discharge. These results are robust to a wide set of model specifications, the use of alternative profitability measurements, and the use of an alternative instrumental variable identification strategy. Additional subsample analysis that controls for a rich set of hospital quality measures and system affiliation information also yields similar results.
Conclusion: We show that higher chargemaster markups are associated with higher hospital profitability. Additional research is needed to understand how chargemaster pricing impact health outcomes and health care disparities.
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