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ESTIMATING MARGINAL RETURNS TO MEDICAL CARE: EVIDENCE FROM AT-RISK NEWBORNS. | LitMetric

ESTIMATING MARGINAL RETURNS TO MEDICAL CARE: EVIDENCE FROM AT-RISK NEWBORNS.

Q J Econ

Columbia University and NBER, MIT and NBER, Yale University and NBER, Harvard University.

Published: May 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • The text explores whether the additional costs of medical spending for very low birth weight newborns are justified by the health benefits they receive.
  • Using data from US births, it reveals that newborns just below the 1500 grams threshold have lower one-year mortality rates compared to those just above it, suggesting significant health advantages from small increases in birth weight.
  • The study estimates that the cost to save a statistical life for these high-risk newborns is around $550,000 in 2006 dollars, highlighting the high financial investment associated with their care.

Article Abstract

A key policy question is whether the benefits of additional medical expenditures exceed their costs. We propose a new approach for estimating marginal returns to medical spending based on variation in medical inputs generated by diagnostic thresholds. Specifically, we combine regression discontinuity estimates that compare health outcomes and medical treatment provision for newborns on either side of the very low birth weight threshold at 1500 grams. First, using data on the census of US births in available years from 1983-2002, we find that newborns with birth weights just below 1500 grams have lower one-year mortality rates than do newborns with birth weights just above this cutoff, even though mortality risk tends to decrease with birth weight. One-year mortality falls by approximately one percentage point as birth weight crosses 1500 grams from above, which is large relative to mean infant mortality of 5.5% just above 1500 grams. Second, using hospital discharge records for births in five states in available years from 1991-2006, we find that newborns with birth weights just below 1500 grams have discontinuously higher charges and frequencies of specific medical inputs. Hospital costs increase by approximately $4,000 as birth weight crosses 1500 grams from above, relative to mean hospital costs of $40,000 just above 1500 grams. Under an assumption that observed medical spending fully captures the impact of the "very low birth weight" designation on mortality, our estimates suggest that the cost of saving a statistical life of a newborn with birth weight near 1500 grams is on the order of $550,000 in 2006 dollars.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2903901PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/qjec.2010.125.2.591DOI Listing

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