Do Hospital Mergers Reduce Waiting Times? Theory and Evidence from the English NHS
Vanessa Cirulli,
Giorgia Marini,
Marco Marini and
Odd Rune Straume
Working Papers from Sapienza University of Rome, DISS
Abstract:
We analyse -theoretically and empirically- the effect of hospital mergers on waiting times in healthcare markets where prices are fixed. Using a spatial modelling framework where patients choose provider based on travelling distance and waiting times, we show that the effect is theoretically ambiguous. In the presence of cost synergies, the scope for lower waiting times as a result of the merger is larger if the hospitals are more profitoriented. This result is arguably conformed by our empirical analysis, which is based on a conditional flexible difference-in-differences methodology applied to a long panel of data on hospital mergers in the English NHS, where we find that the effects of a merger on waiting times crucially rely on a legal status that can reasonably be linked to the degree of profitorientation. Whereas hospital mergers involving Foundation Trusts tend to reduce waiting times, the corresponding effect of mergers involving hospitals without this legal status tends to go in the opposite direction.
Keywords: Hospital merger; waiting times; profit-orientation. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023-06
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Related works:
Working Paper: Do Hospital Mergers Reduce Waiting Times? Theory and Evidence from the English NHS (2023) 
Working Paper: Do Hospital Mergers Reduce Waiting Times? Theory and Evidence from the English NHS (2023) 
Working Paper: Do hospital mergers reduce waiting times? Theory and evidence from the english NHS (2023) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:saq:wpaper:19/23
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