Reforms giving users of public services choice of provider aim to improve quality. But such reforms will work only if quality affects choice of provider. We test this crucial prerequisite in the English health care market by examining the choice of 3.4 million individuals of family doctor. Family doctor practices provide primary care and control access to non-emergency hospital care, the quality of their clinical care is measured and published and care is free. In this setting, clinical quality should affect choice. We find that a 1 standard deviation increase in clinical quality would increase practice size by around 17%
Background: In several North-Western European countries, a demand driven health care system has been...
The impacts of choice in public services are controversial. We exploit a reform in the English Natio...
This paper considers the micro-econometric analysis of patients' hospital choice for elective medica...
Recent and planned policy changes in the NHS, including the abolition of the Medical Practices Commi...
This talk discusses Santos et al.'s article on the responsiveness of patients' choice of doctor to v...
We examine whether family doctor firms in England respond to local competition by increasing their q...
Objective: One of the more important objectives with the patient choice reform, introducing non-pric...
We estimate doctor value-added and provide evidence on the distribution of physician quality in an e...
The impact of quality on the demand facing health care providers has important implications for the ...
We examine whether family doctor firms in England respond to local competition by increasing their q...
Background: Following the introduction of elements of managed competition in the Netherlands in 2006...
Policies aiming to spur quality competition among health care providers are ubiquitous, but their im...
Extensions of choice over public services typically aim to generate increases in competition between...
Recent substantive reforms to the English National Health Service expanded patient choice and encour...
Recent substantive reforms to the English National Health Service expanded patient choice and encour...
Background: In several North-Western European countries, a demand driven health care system has been...
The impacts of choice in public services are controversial. We exploit a reform in the English Natio...
This paper considers the micro-econometric analysis of patients' hospital choice for elective medica...
Recent and planned policy changes in the NHS, including the abolition of the Medical Practices Commi...
This talk discusses Santos et al.'s article on the responsiveness of patients' choice of doctor to v...
We examine whether family doctor firms in England respond to local competition by increasing their q...
Objective: One of the more important objectives with the patient choice reform, introducing non-pric...
We estimate doctor value-added and provide evidence on the distribution of physician quality in an e...
The impact of quality on the demand facing health care providers has important implications for the ...
We examine whether family doctor firms in England respond to local competition by increasing their q...
Background: Following the introduction of elements of managed competition in the Netherlands in 2006...
Policies aiming to spur quality competition among health care providers are ubiquitous, but their im...
Extensions of choice over public services typically aim to generate increases in competition between...
Recent substantive reforms to the English National Health Service expanded patient choice and encour...
Recent substantive reforms to the English National Health Service expanded patient choice and encour...
Background: In several North-Western European countries, a demand driven health care system has been...
The impacts of choice in public services are controversial. We exploit a reform in the English Natio...
This paper considers the micro-econometric analysis of patients' hospital choice for elective medica...