Prescription drug expenditures have risen considerably over the last decade and employers have increased outpatient prescription drugs copayments in order to mitigate expenditure growth. This dissertation contains three manuscripts that explore the relationship between copayments, chronic illness, and prescription drug utilization and expenditures. Each study takes advantage of a different natural experiment, where the prescription drug copayment levels for one employer group were increased and the copayment levels for a comparison group remained the same. In the first study a difference-in-differences approach is used to estimate the long and short-term effects of a brand name copayment increase. The findings reveal that the effects of the...
This dissertation is composed of three essays that consider the determinants and persistence of heal...
This dissertation consists of three essays on health economics. Lack of incentive to protect asset ...
To estimate the effect of two separate policy changes in the North Carolina Medicaid program: (1) re...
Prescription drug expenditures have risen considerably over the last decade and employers have incre...
Consumers do not purchase prescription drugs in a standard marketplace setting; instead, they rely o...
ABSTRACT By 2014, national health expenditures are expected to exceed $3 trillion dollars in the Uni...
Rising pharmaceutical expenditures have led to the use of cost-sharing measures. The authors underto...
This dissertation consists of three essays in health economics. The three chapters focus specificall...
This study estimates the effects of an increase in an outpatient prescription drug copayment using a...
'Background: On July 1, 1997, the German government raised drug copayment by EUR2.60 to EUR 4.60, EU...
Background: Value-based insurance designs establish cost-sharing levels to promote services perceive...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2011. Major: Health Services Research, Policy and A...
€ 5.60 or € 6.60 per prescription, depending on package size. The aim of this study was to examine t...
Sixty percent of U.S. adults report frequent use of prescription medications, a prevalence that is h...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2011. Major: Social and Administrative Pharmacy. ...
This dissertation is composed of three essays that consider the determinants and persistence of heal...
This dissertation consists of three essays on health economics. Lack of incentive to protect asset ...
To estimate the effect of two separate policy changes in the North Carolina Medicaid program: (1) re...
Prescription drug expenditures have risen considerably over the last decade and employers have incre...
Consumers do not purchase prescription drugs in a standard marketplace setting; instead, they rely o...
ABSTRACT By 2014, national health expenditures are expected to exceed $3 trillion dollars in the Uni...
Rising pharmaceutical expenditures have led to the use of cost-sharing measures. The authors underto...
This dissertation consists of three essays in health economics. The three chapters focus specificall...
This study estimates the effects of an increase in an outpatient prescription drug copayment using a...
'Background: On July 1, 1997, the German government raised drug copayment by EUR2.60 to EUR 4.60, EU...
Background: Value-based insurance designs establish cost-sharing levels to promote services perceive...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. June 2011. Major: Health Services Research, Policy and A...
€ 5.60 or € 6.60 per prescription, depending on package size. The aim of this study was to examine t...
Sixty percent of U.S. adults report frequent use of prescription medications, a prevalence that is h...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. August 2011. Major: Social and Administrative Pharmacy. ...
This dissertation is composed of three essays that consider the determinants and persistence of heal...
This dissertation consists of three essays on health economics. Lack of incentive to protect asset ...
To estimate the effect of two separate policy changes in the North Carolina Medicaid program: (1) re...