Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, often have discretion over what to provide. This paper shows how, when the purchaser observes what is supplied but neither recipient type nor the actual cost incurred, optimal provision differs from what would be efficient if the purchaser had full information, whether or not the supplier can extract informational rent. The analysis is applied to, among other things, data on tests for coronary artery disease and to Medicare diagnosis-related groups defined by the treatment given, not just the diagnosis, illustrating the biases in provision that result
textabstractContext. To effectively bargain about the price and quality of health services, health i...
Objectives Our analysis assessed the impact of information on patients' preferences in prescription ...
A model of contracting for hospital treatments is presented. For a given diagnosis of the patient, t...
Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, oft...
Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, oft...
Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, oft...
An electronic version of the paper may be downloaded • from the SSRN website: www.SSRN.com • ...
This paper is an empirical investigation of consumer health information. Using a new direct measure ...
Health care provision is almost universally characterised by third party purchasing in which the pro...
To determine the extent to which people make choices inconsistent with expected utility theory when ...
This paper seeks to make three contributions to the literature on supplier induced demand (SID). The...
The supplier induced demand hypothesis relies on the existence of information asymmetry between the ...
In expert service markets, consumers must rely on experts to identify the type of service they need....
We analyze the problem of second-best optimal health insurance in the context of a model in which pa...
The introduction of a market mechanism into the National Health service in the UK was underpinned by...
textabstractContext. To effectively bargain about the price and quality of health services, health i...
Objectives Our analysis assessed the impact of information on patients' preferences in prescription ...
A model of contracting for hospital treatments is presented. For a given diagnosis of the patient, t...
Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, oft...
Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, oft...
Suppliers who are better informed than purchasers, such as physicians treating insured patients, oft...
An electronic version of the paper may be downloaded • from the SSRN website: www.SSRN.com • ...
This paper is an empirical investigation of consumer health information. Using a new direct measure ...
Health care provision is almost universally characterised by third party purchasing in which the pro...
To determine the extent to which people make choices inconsistent with expected utility theory when ...
This paper seeks to make three contributions to the literature on supplier induced demand (SID). The...
The supplier induced demand hypothesis relies on the existence of information asymmetry between the ...
In expert service markets, consumers must rely on experts to identify the type of service they need....
We analyze the problem of second-best optimal health insurance in the context of a model in which pa...
The introduction of a market mechanism into the National Health service in the UK was underpinned by...
textabstractContext. To effectively bargain about the price and quality of health services, health i...
Objectives Our analysis assessed the impact of information on patients' preferences in prescription ...
A model of contracting for hospital treatments is presented. For a given diagnosis of the patient, t...