Health Insurance Plan Choice and Switching

J. Winter, Amelie Wuppermann
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Abstract

Choice of health insurance plans has become a key element of many healthcare systems around the world along with a general expansion of patient choice under the label of “Consumer-Directed Healthcare.” Allowing consumers to choose their insurance plan was commonly associated with the aim of enhancing competition between insurers and thus to contribute to the efficient delivery of healthcare. However, the evidence is accruing that consumers have difficulties in making health insurance decisions in their best interest. For example, many consumers choose plans with which they spend more in terms of premiums and out-of-pocket costs than in other available options. This has consequences for the individual consumer’s budget as well as for the functioning of the insurance market. The literature puts forward several possible reasons for consumers’ difficulties in making health insurance choices in their best interest. First, consumers may not have a sufficient level of knowledge of insurance products; for example, they might not understand insurance terminology. Second, the environment or architecture in which consumers make their decision may be too complicated. Health insurance products vary in a large number of features that consumers have to evaluate when comparing options, introducing search or hassle costs. Third, consumers may be prone to psychological biases and employ decision-making heuristics that impede good choices. For example, they might choose the plan with the cheapest premium, ignoring other important plan features that determine total cost, such as copayments. There is also evidence that consumer education programs, simplification of the choice environment, or introducing nudges such as setting smart defaults facilitate consumer decision making. Despite recent progress in our understanding of consumer choices in health insurance markets, important challenges remain. Evidence-based healthcare policy should be based on an evaluation of whether different interventions aimed at facilitating consumer choices result in welfare improvements. Ultimately, this requires measuring consumer utility, an issue that is vividly debated in the literature. Furthermore, welfare calculations necessitate an understanding of how interventions will affect the supply of health insurance, including supply reactions to changes in demand. This depends on the specific regulatory setting and characteristics of the specific market.
健康保险计划选择和转换
健康保险计划的选择已经成为世界各地许多医疗保健系统的一个关键因素,同时在“消费者导向医疗保健”的标签下,患者选择的普遍扩大。允许消费者选择他们的保险计划通常与加强保险公司之间竞争的目的有关,从而有助于有效地提供医疗保健。然而,越来越多的证据表明,消费者在做出符合自己最大利益的医疗保险决定时遇到了困难。例如,许多消费者选择的保险计划在保费和自付费用方面比其他可选方案花费更多。这对个人消费者的预算以及保险市场的运作都产生了影响。文献提出了几个可能的原因,消费者的困难作出健康保险的选择在他们的最佳利益。首先,消费者对保险产品的了解程度可能不够;例如,他们可能不理解保险术语。其次,消费者做出决策的环境或架构可能过于复杂。健康保险产品有很多不同的功能,消费者在比较选择、引入搜索或麻烦成本时必须对这些功能进行评估。第三,消费者可能容易产生心理偏见,并采用阻碍良好选择的决策启发式。例如,他们可能会选择保费最低的计划,而忽略了决定总成本的其他重要计划功能,如共同支付。也有证据表明,消费者教育计划、简化选择环境或引入诸如设置智能默认值等推动因素有助于消费者做出决策。尽管最近我们对消费者在健康保险市场上的选择的理解有所进展,但仍然存在重大挑战。以证据为基础的卫生保健政策应以评估旨在促进消费者选择的不同干预措施是否会改善福利为基础。最终,这需要衡量消费者效用,这是一个在文献中生动辩论的问题。此外,福利计算需要了解干预措施将如何影响医疗保险的供应,包括供应对需求变化的反应。这取决于具体的监管环境和具体市场的特点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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