对医疗资助决策的行为反应及其对物有所值的影响:来自澳大利亚的证据。

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 ECONOMICS
Health economics Pub Date : 2025-03-18 DOI:10.1002/hec.4958
Peter Ghijben, Dennis Petrie, Silva Zavarsek, Gang Chen, Emily Lancsar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

物有所值是医疗保险计划的基础,因为保险公司必须选择为哪些治疗提供资金。然而,事先评估资金的价值是具有挑战性的,因为成本和结果取决于如何使用治疗。评估通常依赖于在监管机构批准之前进行的早期随机对照试验的证据,在这些试验中,提供者和患者的行为受到严格控制。这种方法忽略了不同的供给条件和激励在实践中如何影响行为。本文考虑了提供者和患者的激励如何在试验和实践设置之间有所不同,并分析了当新的前列腺癌治疗由澳大利亚公共健康保险计划资助时,医疗保健使用如何发生变化。我们发现有证据表明,与试验相比,医生治疗的患者预后较差,患者停止先前治疗并转向新治疗的时间比预期早,治疗时间比预期长。这些和其他行为反应降低了事后的金钱价值。我们的研究结果表明,医疗保险公司在资助新疗法时应仔细考虑供给条件和激励措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Behavioral Responses to Healthcare Funding Decisions and Their Impact on Value for Money: Evidence From Australia.

Value for money is fundamental to health insurance schemes given insurers must choose which treatments to fund. Assessing value for money ex ante is challenging, however, because costs and outcomes depend on how treatments are used. Estimates often rely on evidence from early randomized controlled trials conducted prior to regulatory approval, where provider and patient behaviors are tightly controlled. This approach ignores how different supply conditions and incentives in practice influence behaviors. This paper considers how provider and patient incentives can differ between trial and practice settings and analyses how healthcare use changed when new prostate cancer treatments were funded on the public health insurance scheme in Australia. We find evidence that doctors treated patients with worse prognosis compared to the trials, patients ceased prior treatment and switched to the new treatments earlier than expected, and treatment duration was longer than expected. These and other behavioral responses reduced value for money ex post. Our findings suggest that health insurers should carefully consider the supply conditions and incentives in practice when funding new treatments.

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来源期刊
Health economics
Health economics 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
4.80%
发文量
177
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: This Journal publishes articles on all aspects of health economics: theoretical contributions, empirical studies and analyses of health policy from the economic perspective. Its scope includes the determinants of health and its definition and valuation, as well as the demand for and supply of health care; planning and market mechanisms; micro-economic evaluation of individual procedures and treatments; and evaluation of the performance of health care systems. Contributions should typically be original and innovative. As a rule, the Journal does not include routine applications of cost-effectiveness analysis, discrete choice experiments and costing analyses. Editorials are regular features, these should be concise and topical. Occasionally commissioned reviews are published and special issues bring together contributions on a single topic. Health Economics Letters facilitate rapid exchange of views on topical issues. Contributions related to problems in both developed and developing countries are welcome.
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