Does It Matter Who Pays for Auto Injuries?
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2019
Abstract
In many states, auto insurers rather than health insurers pay for a substantial fraction of the medical care following auto crashes. We examine whether payer identity affects the care received by auto injury patients. A 2003 Colorado reform shifted a large fraction of auto injury patients from coverage through auto insurers to the traditional health insurance system. Despite negligible changes in auto injury characteristics during this period, treatment supply increased following the reform. Procedure use rose by 5–10 percent and billed charges rose by 5 percent. These changes reflect an increase in resources devoted to treatment, yet do not improve mortality.
Keywords
Auto insurance, auto injuries, insurance, insurers, legal reform
Publication Title
Journal of Risk and Insurance
Repository Citation
Heaton, Paul and Helland, Eric, "Does It Matter Who Pays for Auto Injuries?" (2019). All Faculty Scholarship. 2975.
https://doi.org/10.1111/jori.12245