The Effects of Fraud on the Evaluation of Health Care
Creator
Jesilow, Paul
Bibliographic Citation
Health Care Analysis: An International Journal of Health Care Philosophy and Policy 2005 September; 13(3): 239-245
Abstract
Studies on health care practices, financing, and organization increasingly rely on Medicare and other expanded data sets. These studies are of critical importance for public policy and for the development of strategies to contain escalating health care costs, but they often use data that have been corrupted by fraud and abuse. Mistaken conclusions, as to the effectiveness of policy and procedures, are likely being reached in studies that have used corrupted data. Researchers need to consider the suspect nature of results obtained from the corrupted data, and determine methods for making the data more valid.
Date
2005-09Collections
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Doomed to Repeat Our Errors: Fraud in Emerging Health-Care Systems
Jesilow, Paul; Geis, Gilbert; Harris, John C. (1995-06)