Published June 28, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A Denial a Day Keeps the Doctor Away

  • 1. Bureau of Economic Analysis
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
  • 4. Columbia University

Description

Who bears the consequences of administrative problems in health care? We use data on repeated interactions between a large sample of U.S. physicians and many different insurers to document the complexity of health care billing, and estimate its economic costs for doctors and consequences for patients. Observing the back-and-forth sequences of claim denials and resubmissions for past visits, we can estimate physicians' costs of haggling with insurers to collect payments. Combining these costs with the revenue never collected, we estimate that physicians lose 18% of Medicaid revenue to billing problems, compared with 4.7% for Medicare and 2.4% for commercial insurers. Identifying off of physician movers and practices that span state boundaries, we find that physicians respond to billing problems by refusing to accept Medicaid patients in states with more severe billing hurdles. These hurdles are quantitatively just as important as payment rates for explaining variation in physicians' willingness to treat Medicaid patients. We conclude that administrative frictions have first-order costs for doctors, patients, and equality of access to health care. We quantify the potential economic gains—in terms of reduced public spending or increased access to physicians—if these frictions could be reduced and find them to be sizable.

Data availability

The data underlying this article are available in the Harvard Dataverse, https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/DBWQU8 (Dunn et al. 2023).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1093/qje/qjad035
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:7729

Funding

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Center for Health Administration Studies

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Harris School of Public Policy Studies
Department(s)
Harris School of Public Policy Studies Research Publications