  
	
  
Managed Care and Physicians' Provision of Charity Care
March 24-31, 1999 
Journal of the American Medical Association, vol.281, no.12 (March 24-31, 1999): 1087-1092 
 Peter J. Cunningham, Joy M. Grossman, Robert F. St. Peter, Cara S. Lesser 
   
 ealth system changes may affect the ability of physicians to provide
    uncompensated care and may therefore result in decreased access to health care for people
    without health insurance. The authors looked at the Community Tracking Studys survey data
    from a national sample of almost 11,000 physicians from 60 communities and found that 77.3
    percent of them provided an average of 10.3 hours of charity care per week. Physicians who
    derive at least 85 percent of their practice revenue from managed care plans were
    considerably less likely to provide charity care than physicians with little involvement
    with managed care. In addition, physicians who practice in areas with high managed care
    penetration provide fewer hours of charity care than physicians in other areas, regardless
    of their own involvement in managed care. Differences in the provision of charity care
    also were affected by ownership of the practice and practice arrangements. The authors
    interpret the findings as indicating that financial pressures from managed care may be
    limiting the amount of charity care provided by physicians. This may result in reduced
    access to physicians among uninsured persons, and shift an even higher burden of
    uncompensated care onto traditional safety net providers, such as public hospitals and
    community health centers.  
 Free access to this article is available at the Journal 
  of the American Medical Association Web site. 
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