abstract: The current research examines how the price of a medication influences consumers’ beliefs about their own disease risk—a critical question with new laws mandating greater price transparency for health care goods and services. Four studies reveal that consumers believe that lifesaving health goods are priced according to perceived need (i.e., communal-sharing principles) and that price consequently influences risk perceptions and intentions to consume care. Specifically, consumers believe that lower medication prices signal greater accessibility to anyone in need, and such accessibility thus makes them feel that their own self-risk is elevated, increasing consumption. The reverse is true for higher prices. Importantly, these effect...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
ABSTRACT Consumer Behavior and Pharmaceutical Pricing: Correlations and Trends By: Lexie Elizabe...
Each year, Americans spend more money on health care than any other industrialized nation, despite c...
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and ...
article published in journal of economicsAfter developing a conceptual analysis of consumer valuatio...
This paper contributes to the current debate on health system reform by assessing the impact of insu...
Non-transparent information about prices is a key piece of many economic models. George Stigler's se...
Providing health insurance involves a trade-off between the benefits from risk spreading and the cos...
Health insurance increases the demand for healthcare. Since the RAND Health Insurance Experiment in ...
We appreciate helpful comments from Clay Ackerly and James O’Brien. This study was supported by a gr...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
Escalating levels of healthcare spending and price variation in the healthcare market have driven go...
In the midst of rapid and radical change of America’s health care system, the country’s crown jewel ...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
In the midst of rapid and radical change of America’s health care system, the country’s crown jewel ...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
ABSTRACT Consumer Behavior and Pharmaceutical Pricing: Correlations and Trends By: Lexie Elizabe...
Each year, Americans spend more money on health care than any other industrialized nation, despite c...
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and ...
article published in journal of economicsAfter developing a conceptual analysis of consumer valuatio...
This paper contributes to the current debate on health system reform by assessing the impact of insu...
Non-transparent information about prices is a key piece of many economic models. George Stigler's se...
Providing health insurance involves a trade-off between the benefits from risk spreading and the cos...
Health insurance increases the demand for healthcare. Since the RAND Health Insurance Experiment in ...
We appreciate helpful comments from Clay Ackerly and James O’Brien. This study was supported by a gr...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
Escalating levels of healthcare spending and price variation in the healthcare market have driven go...
In the midst of rapid and radical change of America’s health care system, the country’s crown jewel ...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
In the midst of rapid and radical change of America’s health care system, the country’s crown jewel ...
OBJECTIVE: A standard view in health economics is that, although there is no market that determines ...
ABSTRACT Consumer Behavior and Pharmaceutical Pricing: Correlations and Trends By: Lexie Elizabe...
Each year, Americans spend more money on health care than any other industrialized nation, despite c...