Volume 39 | Number 6p2 | December 2004

Abstract List

Ya‐Seng A. Hsueh, Shoou‐Yih D. Lee Ph.D., Yu‐Tung A. Huang


Objective

To examine the effects of global budgeting on the distribution of dentists and the use and cost of dental care in Taiwan.


Data Sources

(1) Monthly dental claim data from January 1996 to December 2001 for the entire insured population in Taiwan. (2) The 1996–2001 population information for the cities, counties and townships in Taiwan, abstracted from the .


Study Design

Longitudinal, using the autocorrelation model.


Principal Findings

Results indicated decline in dental care utilization, particularly after the implementation of dental global budgeting. With few exceptions, dental global budgeting did not improve the distribution of dental care and dentist supply.


Conclusions

The experience of the dental global budget program in Taiwan suggested that dental global budgeting might contain dental care utilization and that several conditions might have to be met in order for the reimbursement system to have effective redistributive impact on dental care and dentist supply.