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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17121
Title: Publicly funded medical savings accounts [electronic resource]
Authors: Hurley, Jeremiah E.
Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis
McMaster University
Keywords: Financing, Personal;Health Expenditures;statistics & numerical data;Medical Savings Accounts;economics;Medical Savings Accounts;utilization;Cost Savings;Financing, Government;Insurance, Health;economics;Insurance, Health;statistics & numerical data;Health Services Needs and Demand;utilization
Publication Date: 2007
Publisher: McMaster University
Series/Report no.: CHEPA working paper series paper 07-01
Abstract: This paper presents the findings from simulations of the introduction of publicly funded Medical Savings Accounts in the province of Ontario, Canada. The analysis exploits a unique data set linking population-based health survey information with individual-level information on all physician services and hospital services utilization over a four year period. The analysis provides greater detail than have previous analyses regarding: the distributional impacts of publicly funded MSAs across individuals of differing health statuses, incomes, ages and current expenditures; the impact of differing degrees of risk-adjustment for MSA contributions; and the impact of MSA funding over multiple years, incorporating year-to-year variation in spending at the individual level. In addition, it analyses designs for publicly funded MSAs than existing studies. Government uses information available from period t-1 to allocate its budget for year t between MSA contributions and catastrophic insurance in a manner that is actuarially fair for the public sector: the government first withholds funds equal to expected catastrophic insurance payments under the MSA plan, and then allocates only the balance to individual MSA accounts. The government captures the savings associated with reduced health care utilization under MSAs and we examine deductibles that vary by income rather than current health care expenditures. The impacts on public expenditures under these designs are more modest than existing studies and under plausible assumptions MSAs are predicted to decrease public expenditures. MSAs, however, are predicted to have unavoidable negative distributional consequences with respect to both public expenditures and out-of-pocket spending
Description: Jeremiah Hurley ... [et al.].
"April 11, 2007."
Title from title page of source document (viewed July 24, 2007).
Includes bibliographical references.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
URI: http://www.chepa.org/portals/0/pdf/WP%2007-01.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17121
Appears in Collections:CHEPA Working Paper Series

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