Adoption and Learning Across Hospitals: The Case of a Revenue-Generating Practice

59 Pages Posted: 12 Apr 2018 Last revised: 8 Jun 2026

Date Written: April 2018

Abstract

Performance-raising practices tend to diffuse slowly in the health care sector. To understand how incentives drive adoption, I study a practice that generates revenue for hospitals: submitting detailed documentation about patients. After a 2008 reform, hospitals could raise their Medicare revenue over 2% by always specifying a patient’s type of heart failure. Hospitals only captured around half of this revenue, indicating that large frictions impeded takeup. Exploiting the fact that many doctors practice at multiple hospitals, I find that four-fifths of the dispersion in adoption reflects differences in the ability of hospitals to extract documentation from physicians. Hospital adoption is robustly correlated with generating survival for heart attack patients and using inexpensive survival-raising standards of care. Hospital-physician integration and electronic medical records also influence adoption. These findings highlight the potential for institution-level frictions, including agency conflicts, to explain variations in health care performance across providers.

Suggested Citation

Sacarny, Adam, Adoption and Learning Across Hospitals: The Case of a Revenue-Generating Practice (April 2018). NBER Working Paper No. w24497, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3158971

Adam Sacarny (Contact Author)

Columbia University ( email )

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