Health economics studies how much healthcare costs and the results of treatments, devices, and management methods. It tries to find the best way to balance quality care with keeping healthcare systems financially strong. For medical practice leaders and owners, knowing how decisions affect money is more important now because healthcare costs keep rising, insurance rules change, and new regulations come up.
Clinical settings use health economics research to get facts about cost-effectiveness, efficiency, and patient needs. For example, administrators decide which medical tools to use or stop using, how to organize care to reduce waste, and how to use staff time better based on this research.
But usually, healthcare research, including health economics, is hidden behind paywalls or in journals that cost money. This makes it hard for many healthcare workers, especially in smaller clinics, to get up-to-date information without paying a lot. This limits their ability to stay informed about important cost analyses.
Open access publishing means that research articles, data, and extra materials are free and easy to get on the internet. In healthcare research, this allows administrators, doctors, and IT managers to see the newest studies without paying or needing special access.
The journal Value in Health, published by Elsevier for ISPOR (a health economics professional group), is an example of a popular open access source. The July 2025 issue has many health economics articles that anyone can read. It is respected in the field with a high impact factor and CiteScore. The articles cover many topics, such as patient factors in using AI chatbots and AI tools for data handling, which affect clinics and economics today.
Open access journals like Value in Health help U.S. medical practice managers in several ways:
Using health economics in clinics means more than just reading research. Leaders must turn studies into rules, tech use plans, and workflow changes. Open access helps by giving a wide knowledge base that people can use when suggesting changes or joining value-based care programs.
For example, open access health economics helps leaders when they negotiate contracts with insurance companies. Data about cost and patient results can support fair payment rates. Also, it helps in budgeting for things like staff training or buying AI tools to work better.
IT managers also gain from open access when they look into new digital health tools. Studies show AI is used more to handle daily tasks like phone calls and appointment setting. Knowing the economic effects helps IT teams decide on buying AI and make good business cases for using it.
Artificial intelligence and workflow automation are becoming important in health economics and using it in clinics. Beyond medical help, AI tools reduce costs and improve how healthcare offices run.
One key example is AI-powered front-office phone answering, offered by companies like Simbo AI. These systems handle appointment bookings, patient questions, and routine calls. This cuts staff costs and makes it easier for patients to get answers quickly—both very important in health economics research on outcomes.
AI impact on administration includes:
Health economics studies say using AI tools widely can improve cost-effectiveness. Open access research lets U.S. clinics see how AI affects their spending and daily work.
Also, AI agents that extract and organize data from clinical records help with billing, compliance, and tracking outcomes. This supports better practice management and saves money.
For IT managers, key actions include:
Open access publishing helps healthcare leaders learn about these AI tools and put them to use carefully and cost-effectively.
Today, U.S. clinics must give care that works well and costs less. Practice leaders and owners need up-to-date, trusted economic data to handle payment rule changes, federal laws, and patient needs.
Open access publishing removes paywalls, giving wide access to important research from respected sources like Value in Health. This journal has strong health economics studies covering outcomes, costs, and new ideas relevant to daily clinic work.
For leaders, this means better evidence for:
Also, using AI tools supported by health economics creates new chances to make admin and clinical work easier. As AI phone answering becomes common in U.S. clinics, managers need to know about their cost effects—details often found in open access papers.
Open access publishing has made it easier to use health economics research in U.S. clinics. By giving free access to important studies, especially through journals like Value in Health, administrators, owners, and IT managers get timely and trusted data. This helps them make better decisions about running clinics efficiently and improving patient care.
Combining this research with new AI tools, like phone automation and data extraction software, supports better financial health and clinic management. Open access means clinics of all sizes can stay informed and effective in a healthcare world shaped by economic challenges and tech changes.
With more open access health economics research available, U.S. clinics are in a better position to make choices that improve patient care and their own operations.
The research is published in ‘Value in Health’, Volume 28, Issue 6, Supplement 1, July 2025, by Elsevier via ScienceDirect.
It focuses on health economics and outcomes research, relevant to evaluating healthcare interventions including AI.
Yes, ‘Value in Health’ supports open access, enabling broader dissemination of research findings.
The journal has an Impact Factor of 6.0 and a CiteScore of 8.0, indicating its influence in health research.
The International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) is 1098-3015 for ‘Value in Health’.
It is published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of ISPOR, the professional society for health economics and outcomes research.
Yes, all rights are reserved including for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
The issue includes articles, special issues, and article collections related to health economics and outcomes research.
Given its publication in a reputable indexed journal with high impact, the research is peer-reviewed and credible.
The research is part of Volume 28, Issue 6, Supplement 1, covering pages S1 to S430, indicating a supplement with multiple studies.