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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Medicaid Managed Care And The Health Care Utilization Of Foster Children, Makayla Palmer, James Marton, Aaron Yelowitz, Jeffery Talbert Dec 2017

Medicaid Managed Care And The Health Care Utilization Of Foster Children, Makayla Palmer, James Marton, Aaron Yelowitz, Jeffery Talbert

Economics Faculty Publications

A recent trend in state Medicaid programs is the transition of vulnerable populations into Medicaid managed care (MMC) who were initially carved out of such coverage, such as foster children or those with disabilities. The purpose of this article is to evaluate the impact of the transition of foster children from fee-for-service Medicaid coverage to MMC coverage on outpatient health care utilization. There is very little empirical evidence on the impact of managed care on the health care utilization of foster children because of the recent timing of these transitions as well as challenges associated with finding data sets large …


Consumer's Guide To Regulatory Impact Analysis: Ten Tips For Being An Informed Policymaker, Susan Dudley, Richard Belzer, Glenn C. Blomquist, Timothy Brennan, Christopher Carrigan, Joseph Cordes, Louis A. Cox, Arthur Fraas, John Graham, George Gray, James Hammitt, Kerry Krutilla, Peter Linquiti, Randall Lutter, Brian Mannix, Stuart Shapiro, Anne Smith, W. Kip Viscusi, Richard Zerbe Jul 2017

Consumer's Guide To Regulatory Impact Analysis: Ten Tips For Being An Informed Policymaker, Susan Dudley, Richard Belzer, Glenn C. Blomquist, Timothy Brennan, Christopher Carrigan, Joseph Cordes, Louis A. Cox, Arthur Fraas, John Graham, George Gray, James Hammitt, Kerry Krutilla, Peter Linquiti, Randall Lutter, Brian Mannix, Stuart Shapiro, Anne Smith, W. Kip Viscusi, Richard Zerbe

Economics Faculty Publications

Regulatory impact analyses (RIAs) weigh the benefits of regulations against the burdens they impose and are invaluable tools for informing decision makers.We offer 10 tips for nonspecialist policymakers and interested stakeholders who will be reading RIAs as consumers.

  1. Core problem: Determine whether the RIA identifies the core problem (compelling public need) the regulation is intended to address.
  2. Alternatives: Look for an objective, policy-neutral evaluation of the relative merits of reasonable alternatives.
  3. Baseline: Check whether the RIA presents a reasonable “counterfactual” against which benefits and costs are measured.
  4. Increments: Evaluate whether totals and averages obscure relevant distinctions and trade-offs.
  5. Uncertainty: Recognize …