The Growing Importance of Cost Accounting for Hospitals

Authors

  • Nathan Carroll, PhD Department of Health Services Administration University of Alabama at Birmingham USA
  • Justin C. Lord Department of Health Services Administration University of Alabama at Birmingham USA

Abstract

Management scholars have identified several cost accounting methods that provide organizations with accurate estimates of the costs they incur in producing output. However, little is known about which of these methods are most commonly used by hospitals. This article examines the literature on the relative costs and benefits of different accounting methods and the scant literature describing which of these methods are most commonly used by hospitals. It goes on to suggest that hospitals have not adopted sophisticated cost accounting systems because characteristics of the hospital industry make the costs of doing so high and the benefits of service-level cost information relatively low. However, changes in insurance benefit design are creating incentives for patients to compare hospital prices. If these changes continue, hospitals’ patient volumes and revenues may increasingly be dictated by the decisions of individual patients shopping for low-cost services and as a result, providers could see increasing pressure to set prices at levels that reflect the costs of providing care. If these changes materialize, cost accounting information will become a much more important part of hospital management than it has been in the past.

Author Biographies

  • Nathan Carroll, PhD, Department of Health Services Administration University of Alabama at Birmingham USA

    Assistant Professor

    Department of Health Services Administration

    University of Alabama at Birmingham USA

  • Justin C. Lord, Department of Health Services Administration University of Alabama at Birmingham USA

    Justin C. Lord

    Doctoral Student

    Department of Health Services Administration

    University of Alabama at Birmingham USA

References

See the article for footnotes and references.

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Published

2016-11-28

Issue

Section

Articles