Showing 1 through 5 of 41 records. | 1. Bian, John. and Morrisey, Michael. "The Effects of Free-Standing Ambulatory Surgery Centers on Hospital Surgery Volume" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Economics of Population Health: Inaugural Conference of the American Society of Health Economists, TBA, Madison, WI, USA, Jun 04, 2006 <Not Available>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p90011_index.html>Publication Type: Abstract Abstract: Rationale: Hospitals traditionally compete among themselves for health services such as surgical procedures. The growing number of free-standing ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) poses a potential threat to hospital surgery services. However, there has been little empirical evidence on the effect of ASCs on hospital surgery volume.
Objective: This study examined the effect of the growth in ASCs on community hospital outpatient and inpatient surgery volume.
Methods: Using secondary data of the 1992-2001 American Hospital Association Annual Survey files, the 2002 Medicare Online Survey Certification and Reporting System, an HMO penetration file, and the Area Resource Files, we constructed a balanced Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) panel dataset including 317 MSAs from 1992-2001. The unit of analysis was a MSA-year. Ordinary least squares regressions with MSA and year fixed effects were used to control for MSA-level heterogeneity and time trends. Three dependent variables were the log-transformed hospital outpatient, inpatient, and total (inpatient and outpatient combined) surgery volumes. The key explanatory variable was the number of ASCs per 100,000 people. Other covariates included health maintenance organization (HMO) penetration, hospital concentration measured by the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, supplies of surgeons and physicians, and demographic and economic characteristics. The standard errors were adjusted via Huber standard errors correction.
Results: The panel data included a total of 3170 MSA-years. From 1992-2001, average outpatient surgery volume at the MSA-level increased by 23% from 58,783 to 72,111, average inpatient surgery volume decreased by 12% from 50,778 to 44,911, and average total surgery volume only increased by 7% from 109,561 to 117,022. During the same period, the number of ASCs increased by 143% from .66 to 1.69 per 100,000 people, HMO penetration nearly doubled, and hospital markets became more concentrated. In regression analysis, the number of ASCs per 100,000 people was inversely associated with outpatient and total surgery volumes (p<.01) but was not associated with inpatient surgery volume (p>.10). Other thing equal, an increase in 1 ASC per 100,000 people is associated with a decrease of 4.1% in outpatient surgery volume and a decrease of 1.8% in total surgery volume. In addition, our study showed that increased hospital concentration raised hospital outpatient and total surgery volumes. But we found no associations of HMO penetration and hospital surgery volume.
Conclusions: This was the first study using nationally representative MSA-level panel data from 1992-2001 to show that ASCs may lead to a decline in hospital total surgery volume, largely driven by decreased hospital outpatient surgery volume. Additional research needs to focus on the impact of ASCs on hospital provision of charitable care and quality of care. |
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| 2. Rhodes, Diana. "Asian-American Women: Constructions, Re/Constructions, & De/Constructions of Beauty & Cosmetic Surgery" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the National Women's Studies Association, TBA, St. Charles, IL, Pheasant Run, Jun 28, 2007 <Not Available>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p170195_index.html>Publication Type: Poster Abstract: The purpose of this research is to open a dialogue concerning Asian American women, beauty constructs, and cosmetic surgery. Asian American women hold a unique position in American society being the exotified “other”, negatively stereotyped, and being under and misrepresented in mainstream media. This research is a feminist exploration to give Asian American women a voice in their experiences negotiating their physical beauty in a society that rarely accurately represents their experiences. I am focusing on a few major themes: beauty ideals, constructions, and cosmetic surgery within the Asian American community. |
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| 3. Henderson-King, Donna. "Predictors of Women's Acceptance of Cosmetic Surgery" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Association For Women in Psychology, Marriott at Eagle Crest Conference Resort, Ypsilanti/Ann Arbor, MI, Mar 30, 2006 <Not Available>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p93601_index.html>Publication Type: Poster Abstract: As rates of cosmetic surgery procedures continue to rise, particularly among girls and women, it become increasingly important to understand attitudes about cosmetic surgery. This study examines such attitudes and considers attitude predictors. Importance of attractiveness and a lack of bodily control emerge as important predictor variables. |
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| | Pages: 28 pages | || | Words: 6794 words | || | |
| 4. Kang, Minjeong. and Langford, Rebecca. "The Portrayals of Plastic Surgeries in U. S. News Media: Effects of Deviance and Social Significance on Prominence" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the NCA 94th Annual Convention, TBA, San Diego, CA, Nov 20, 2008 Online <PDF>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p257627_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: A content analysis of three newspapers and four television networks on coverage of plastic surgeries indicates plastic surgeries are still considered a deviant act by news media despite its increasing popularity in the United States and that the journalistic tone of plastic surgeries by major newspapers and television news is normatively motivated, in that it still remains to describe such acts as deviant and negative. The findings of this study suggests the discrepancy in the portrayals of plastic surgeries between popular media and of news media as a result of news media’s take on the role of watchdog in terms of setting the normative frame for certain issues that they view as normatively challenging. |
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| | Pages: 28 pages | || | Words: 7980 words | || | |
| 5. Torigoe, Chie. "Japanese Whiteness in Cosmetic Surgery Online Advertisements" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the NCA 94th Annual Convention, TBA, San Diego, CA, Nov 20, 2008 Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-12-04 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p255950_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: This study investigates the configuration of whiteness in Japan and rhetorical strategies employed to construct and perpetuate racial ideologies in Japan by analyzing the media portrayal of white women in the Japanese cosmetic surgery online advertisements. Ideological analysis of these images reveals that whiteness ideology and racial “Otherness” ideology are constructed and maintained in the ads by five rhetorical strategies including standardization, fragmentation, sexualization, distancing, and fixation of stereotypical images. |
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