In a model incorporating uncertainty and state-dependent utility of health services, as well as information asymmetry between patients/buyers and physicians/sellers, two types of equilibria are compared: (1) when consumers have conventional third-party insurance and doctors are paid on the basis of fee-for-service; and (2) when insurance is through an HMO which provides health services through its own doctors. Conditions are found under which contractual or legal incentives can overcome the information asymmetry problem and bring about an efficient allocation of resources to health services provision
Increasingly, physicians’ payment schemes are being reformed to en- hance performance and to ensure ...
Traditional health economics assumes that the patient should always consult a primary cone pshysicia...
Monopolies appear throughout medical care markets, as a result of patents, limits to the extent of t...
We analyze the problem of second-best optimal health insurance in the context of a model in which pa...
The discussion about health care systems focuses on the dynamics of expenditures and on the weak gro...
We model asymmetric information arising from physician agency, and its effect on the design of payme...
Abstract The paper presents a stylised model of contracting for a specific health service. The Ž ben...
This paper looks at the impact of patient knowledge on utilization and quality in physician services...
We develop a model in which two insurers and two health care providers compete for a fixed mass of p...
We develop a model in which two insurers and two health care providers compete for a fixed mass of p...
Health care provision is almost universally characterised by third party purchasing in which the pro...
Classical analysis of health insurance markets often focuses on adverse selection, which creates a d...
We develop a model of insurance with an informational asymmetry be-tween the insurer and the policy ...
Abstract Background Healthcare costs in most developed countries are not clearly linked to better pa...
Information Asymmetry and Health Uncertainty: The Contribution of Contract Theory by Lise Rochaix ...
Increasingly, physicians’ payment schemes are being reformed to en- hance performance and to ensure ...
Traditional health economics assumes that the patient should always consult a primary cone pshysicia...
Monopolies appear throughout medical care markets, as a result of patents, limits to the extent of t...
We analyze the problem of second-best optimal health insurance in the context of a model in which pa...
The discussion about health care systems focuses on the dynamics of expenditures and on the weak gro...
We model asymmetric information arising from physician agency, and its effect on the design of payme...
Abstract The paper presents a stylised model of contracting for a specific health service. The Ž ben...
This paper looks at the impact of patient knowledge on utilization and quality in physician services...
We develop a model in which two insurers and two health care providers compete for a fixed mass of p...
We develop a model in which two insurers and two health care providers compete for a fixed mass of p...
Health care provision is almost universally characterised by third party purchasing in which the pro...
Classical analysis of health insurance markets often focuses on adverse selection, which creates a d...
We develop a model of insurance with an informational asymmetry be-tween the insurer and the policy ...
Abstract Background Healthcare costs in most developed countries are not clearly linked to better pa...
Information Asymmetry and Health Uncertainty: The Contribution of Contract Theory by Lise Rochaix ...
Increasingly, physicians’ payment schemes are being reformed to en- hance performance and to ensure ...
Traditional health economics assumes that the patient should always consult a primary cone pshysicia...
Monopolies appear throughout medical care markets, as a result of patents, limits to the extent of t...