skip to main content
Guest
My Research
My Account
Sign out
Sign in
This feature requires javascript
Library Search
Find Databases
Browse Search
E-Journals A-Z
E-Books A-Z
Citation Linker
Help
Language:
English
Vietnamese
This feature required javascript
This feature requires javascript
Primo Advanced Search
All Library Resources
All
Course Materials
Course Materials
Primo Advanced Search Query Term
Input search text:
Show Results with:
criteria input
contains
is (exact)
starts with
Show Results with:
criteria input
Any
in the title
as author/creator
in subject
Full Text
ISBN
ISSN
TOC
Keyword
Field
Show Results with:
in the title
Show Results with:
Any
in the title
as author/creator
in subject
Full Text
ISBN
ISSN
TOC
Keyword
Field
Primo Advanced Search prefilters
Material Type:
criteria input
All items
Books
Articles
Images
Audio Visual
Maps
Graduate theses
Search Scope:
All Library Resources
Print Resources
Digital Resources
Online E-Resources
Simple Search
This feature requires javascript
The Role of Overbilling in Hospitals’ Earnings Management Decisions
ISSN: 0963-8180 ;EISSN: 1468-4497 ;DOI: 10.1080/09638180.2017.1383168
Digital Resources/Online E-Resources
Citations
Cited by
View Online
Details
Recommendations
Reviews
Times Cited
External Links
This feature requires javascript
Actions
Add to My Research
Remove from My Research
E-mail
Print
Permalink
Citation
EasyBib
EndNote
RefWorks
Delicious
Export RIS
Export BibTeX
This feature requires javascript
Title:
The Role of Overbilling in Hospitals’ Earnings Management Decisions
Author:
Heese, Jonas
Subjects:
Earnings
Management
Description:
This paper examines the role of overbilling in hospitals’ earnings management choices. Overbilling by hospitals is a form of revenue manipulation that involves misclassifying a patient into a diagnosis-related group that yields higher reimbursement. As overbilling allows hospitals to increase revenues without altering operations, affecting costs, or having to reverse such behavior in the future, I propose and find that overbilling reduces hospitals’ use of managing accruals or cutting discretionary expenditures. Next, I find that hospital managers prefer overbilling to managing accruals (cutting discretionary expenditures) when cutting discretionary expenditures (managing accruals) is constrained and vice versa. Collectively, my findings suggest that overbilling is an important alternative manipulation tool in hospitals.
Publisher:
Informa UK Limited
Creation Date:
2018
Language:
English
Identifier:
ISSN: 0963-8180
EISSN: 1468-4497
DOI: 10.1080/09638180.2017.1383168
Source:
Harvard University Library DASH
This feature requires javascript
This feature requires javascript
Back to results list
Previous
Result
7
Next
This feature requires javascript
This feature requires javascript
Searching Remote Databases, Please Wait
Searching for
in
scope:(TDTS),scope:(SFX),scope:(TDT),scope:(SEN),primo_central_multiple_fe
Show me what you have so far
This feature requires javascript
This feature requires javascript