Consumers of services that are financed by a third party, such as publicly financed health care or firm-sponsored health plans, are often allowed to freely choose provider. The rationale is that consumer choice may improve the matching of consumers and providers and spur quality competition. Such improvements are contingent on consumers having access to comparative information about providers and acting on this information when making their choice. However, in the presence of information frictions and switching costs, consumers may have limited ability to find suitable providers. We use two large-scale randomized field experiments in primary health care to examine if the choice of provider is affected when consumers receive comparative info...
In the last decades, market elements—such as patient choice, provider competition and payment incent...
Keywords:Managed competition;preferred provider choice;consumer channeling;status quo bias;discrete ...
In the last decades, market elements—such as patient choice, provider competition and payment incent...
Consumer choice policies may improve the matching of consumers and providers, and may spur competiti...
The steering of health care through patient choice has become an integral part of several health sys...
The steering of health care through patient choice has become an integral part of several health sys...
Recent reforms in Swedish primary care have involved choice of provider for the population combined ...
BackgroundTo stimulate quality through choice of provider, patients need to seek and base their deci...
Abstract Background To stimulate quality through choice of provider, patients need to seek and base ...
Market frictions, such as imperfect information or hassle costs, may reduce benefits from market inc...
Policies aiming to spur quality competition among health care providers are ubiquitous, but their im...
Policies aiming to spur quality competition among health care providers are ubiquitous, but their im...
Background: In 2007, a reform of Swedish primary healthcare began when some regions implemented enha...
Objective: One of the more important objectives with the patient choice reform, introducing non-pric...
The case for competition in health-care markets rests on economic models in which providers seek to ...
In the last decades, market elements—such as patient choice, provider competition and payment incent...
Keywords:Managed competition;preferred provider choice;consumer channeling;status quo bias;discrete ...
In the last decades, market elements—such as patient choice, provider competition and payment incent...
Consumer choice policies may improve the matching of consumers and providers, and may spur competiti...
The steering of health care through patient choice has become an integral part of several health sys...
The steering of health care through patient choice has become an integral part of several health sys...
Recent reforms in Swedish primary care have involved choice of provider for the population combined ...
BackgroundTo stimulate quality through choice of provider, patients need to seek and base their deci...
Abstract Background To stimulate quality through choice of provider, patients need to seek and base ...
Market frictions, such as imperfect information or hassle costs, may reduce benefits from market inc...
Policies aiming to spur quality competition among health care providers are ubiquitous, but their im...
Policies aiming to spur quality competition among health care providers are ubiquitous, but their im...
Background: In 2007, a reform of Swedish primary healthcare began when some regions implemented enha...
Objective: One of the more important objectives with the patient choice reform, introducing non-pric...
The case for competition in health-care markets rests on economic models in which providers seek to ...
In the last decades, market elements—such as patient choice, provider competition and payment incent...
Keywords:Managed competition;preferred provider choice;consumer channeling;status quo bias;discrete ...
In the last decades, market elements—such as patient choice, provider competition and payment incent...