AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the ownership of nursing homes (public, nonprofit, and for-profit) affects service quality and access for low-income clients.
  • Public and nonprofit nursing homes demonstrate similar levels of service quality, which are notably higher than those of for-profit facilities.
  • Public nursing homes also cater to a larger share of Medicaid recipients compared to their nonprofit and sometimes for-profit counterparts, highlighting a disparity in long-term care access.

Article Abstract

Are public and private organizations fundamentally different? This question has been among the most enduring inquiries in public administration. Our study explores the impact of organizational ownership on two complementary aspects of performance: service quality and access to services for impoverished clients. Derived from public management research on performance determinants and nursing home care literature, our hypotheses stipulate that public, nonprofit, and for-profit nursing homes use different approaches to balance the strategic tradeoff between two aspects of performance. Panel data on 14,423 facilities were analyzed to compare measures of quality and access across three sectors using different estimation methods. Findings indicate that ownership status is associated with critical differences in both quality and access. Public and nonprofit organizations are similar in terms of quality, and both perform significantly better than their for-profit counterparts. When compared to nonprofit and, in some cases, for-profit facilities, public nursing homes have a significantly higher share of Medicaid recipients. The paper proposes strategies to address the identified long-term care divide.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pam.20327DOI Listing

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