Optimal expansion paths for hospitals of different types: viewpoint of scope economies and evidence from Chinese hospitals
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2029045
DOI10.1016/j.ejor.2020.07.025zbMath1487.90660OpenAlexW3043403205MaRDI QIDQ2029045
Publication date: 3 June 2021
Published in: European Journal of Operational Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2020.07.025
Applications of mathematical programming (90C90) Management decision making, including multiple objectives (90B50)
Related Items (2)
Does marginal productivity of product mix matter? Data envelopment analysis for marginal profit consistency in Taiwan's life insurance industry ⋮ Group decision making in data envelopment analysis: a robot selection application
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Some Models for Estimating Technical and Scale Inefficiencies in Data Envelopment Analysis
- Measuring the efficiency of decision making units
- Coordination efficiency in multi-output settings: a DEA approach
- Efficiency estimation and error decomposition in the stochastic frontier model: A Monte Carlo analysis
- A Monte Carlo comparison of two production frontier estimation methods: Corrected ordinary least squares and data envelopment analysis
- Economies of scope in the health sector: the case of Portuguese hospitals
- Efficiency measurement in the stochastic frontier model
- Nonparametric frontier estimation: A robust approach.
- Computing economies of vertical integration, economies of scope and economies of scale using partial frontier nonparametric methods
- Analysis of economies of scope by data envelopment analysis: comparison of efficient frontiers
- Economies of scope in two-stage production systems: A data envelopment analysis approach
- NONPARAMETRIC FRONTIER ESTIMATION: A CONDITIONAL QUANTILE-BASED APPROACH
- Productive, Scale And Scope Efficiencies In U.S. Hospital-Based Nursing Homes
This page was built for publication: Optimal expansion paths for hospitals of different types: viewpoint of scope economies and evidence from Chinese hospitals