In this paper, we investigate in a controlled laboratory experiment physician behavior in the case of payment heterogeneity. In the experiment, each physician provides medical care to patients whose treatments are paid for either under fee-for-service (FFS) or capitation (CAP). We observe that physicians customize care in response to the payment system. A FFS patient receives considerably more medical care than the corresponding CAP patient with the same illness and treatment preference. Physicians over-serve FFS patients and under-serve CAP patients. After a CAP payment reduction in the experiment we observe neither a quantity reduction under CAP nor a spillover into the treatment of FFS patients
This paper experimentally investigates the altruistic behavior of physicians and whether this behavi...
In a controlled laboratory environment, we test the role of medical malpractice liability on physici...
Economics influences how medical care is delivered, organized, and progresses. Fee-for-service payme...
Background: Physicians’ financial interests might conflict with the best service to patients. It is ...
Abstract Understanding how physicians respond to incentives from payment schemes is a central concer...
Mixed payment systems have become a prominent alternative to paying physicians through fee-for-servi...
We study physicians’ incentives to use personalized medicine techniques, replicating the physician’s...
We study physicians’ incentives to use personalized medicine techniques, replicating the physician’s...
Pay-for-performance attempts to tie physician payment to quality of care. In a controlled laboratory...
Recent experimental studies analyze the behavior of physicians towards patients and find that physic...
Combining the economic literature on principal-agent relationships with examples of marketplace inno...
International audienceWe study physicians’ incentives to use personalised medicine techniques, repli...
With the cost of healthcare rising in the United States, policy makers and hospital management are t...
It has been suggested by researchers that fixed fee contracts are generally used to shift the full c...
How referral fees affect primary care physicians' behavior is not well understood. We conduct a beha...
This paper experimentally investigates the altruistic behavior of physicians and whether this behavi...
In a controlled laboratory environment, we test the role of medical malpractice liability on physici...
Economics influences how medical care is delivered, organized, and progresses. Fee-for-service payme...
Background: Physicians’ financial interests might conflict with the best service to patients. It is ...
Abstract Understanding how physicians respond to incentives from payment schemes is a central concer...
Mixed payment systems have become a prominent alternative to paying physicians through fee-for-servi...
We study physicians’ incentives to use personalized medicine techniques, replicating the physician’s...
We study physicians’ incentives to use personalized medicine techniques, replicating the physician’s...
Pay-for-performance attempts to tie physician payment to quality of care. In a controlled laboratory...
Recent experimental studies analyze the behavior of physicians towards patients and find that physic...
Combining the economic literature on principal-agent relationships with examples of marketplace inno...
International audienceWe study physicians’ incentives to use personalised medicine techniques, repli...
With the cost of healthcare rising in the United States, policy makers and hospital management are t...
It has been suggested by researchers that fixed fee contracts are generally used to shift the full c...
How referral fees affect primary care physicians' behavior is not well understood. We conduct a beha...
This paper experimentally investigates the altruistic behavior of physicians and whether this behavi...
In a controlled laboratory environment, we test the role of medical malpractice liability on physici...
Economics influences how medical care is delivered, organized, and progresses. Fee-for-service payme...