Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5100741 | Journal of Health Economics | 2017 | 46 Pages |
Abstract
Exploiting the Danish roll-out of same-day discharge policies after uncomplicated births, we find that treated newborns have a higher probability of hospital readmission in the first month after birth. While these short-run effects may indicate substitution of hospital stays with readmissions, we also find that-in the longer run-a same-day discharge decreases children's 9th grade GPA. This effect is driven by children and mothers, who prior to the policy change would have been least likely to experience a same-day discharge. Using administrative and survey data to assess potential mechanisms, we show that a same-day discharge impacts those parents' health investments and their children's medium-run health. Our findings point to important negative effects of policies that expand same-day discharge policies to broad populations of mothers and children.
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Authors
Hans Henrik Sievertsen, Miriam Wüst,