Resource scarcity and prioritization decisions in medical care: A lab experiment with heterogeneous patient types

During the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered to consolidate public spending. Such budget changes likely affect provision behavior in health care. We study how different degrees of resourc...

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Published inHealth economics Vol. 30; no. 2; pp. 470 - 477
Main Authors Brendel, Franziska, Einhaus, Lisa, Then, Franziska
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, NJ Wiley 01.02.2021
Wiley Periodicals Inc
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ISSN1099-1050
1057-9230
1099-1050
DOI10.1002/hec.4192

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Abstract During the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered to consolidate public spending. Such budget changes likely affect provision behavior in health care. We study how different degrees of resource scarcity affect medical service provision and, in consequence, patients' health. In a controlled lab environment, physicians are paid by capitation and allocate limited resources to several patients. This implies a trade-off between physicians' profits and patients' health benefits. We vary levels of resource scarcity and patient characteristics systematically and observe that most subjects in the role of physician devote a relatively stable share of budget to patient treatment, implying that they provide fewer services when they face more severe budget constraints. Average patient benefits decrease in proportion to physician budgets. The majority of subjects chooses an allocation that leads to equal patient benefits as opposed to allocating resources efficiently.
AbstractList During the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered to consolidate public spending. Such budget changes likely affect provision behavior in health care. We study how different degrees of resource scarcity affect medical service provision and, in consequence, patients' health. In a controlled lab environment, physicians are paid by capitation and allocate limited resources to several patients. This implies a trade-off between physicians' profits and patients' health benefits. We vary levels of resource scarcity and patient characteristics systematically and observe that most subjects in the role of physician devote a relatively stable share of budget to patient treatment, implying that they provide fewer services when they face more severe budget constraints. Average patient benefits decrease in proportion to physician budgets. The majority of subjects chooses an allocation that leads to equal patient benefits as opposed to allocating resources efficiently.During the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered to consolidate public spending. Such budget changes likely affect provision behavior in health care. We study how different degrees of resource scarcity affect medical service provision and, in consequence, patients' health. In a controlled lab environment, physicians are paid by capitation and allocate limited resources to several patients. This implies a trade-off between physicians' profits and patients' health benefits. We vary levels of resource scarcity and patient characteristics systematically and observe that most subjects in the role of physician devote a relatively stable share of budget to patient treatment, implying that they provide fewer services when they face more severe budget constraints. Average patient benefits decrease in proportion to physician budgets. The majority of subjects chooses an allocation that leads to equal patient benefits as opposed to allocating resources efficiently.
During the COVID‐19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered to consolidate public spending. Such budget changes likely affect provision behavior in health care. We study how different degrees of resource scarcity affect medical service provision and, in consequence, patients' health. In a controlled lab environment, physicians are paid by capitation and allocate limited resources to several patients. This implies a trade‐off between physicians' profits and patients' health benefits. We vary levels of resource scarcity and patient characteristics systematically and observe that most subjects in the role of physician devote a relatively stable share of budget to patient treatment, implying that they provide fewer services when they face more severe budget constraints. Average patient benefits decrease in proportion to physician budgets. The majority of subjects chooses an allocation that leads to equal patient benefits as opposed to allocating resources efficiently.
Author Einhaus, Lisa
Brendel, Franziska
Then, Franziska
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Keywords resource scarcity
physician behavior
social preferences
laboratory experiment
prioritization
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Snippet During the COVID-19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered...
During the COVID‐19 pandemic, health care systems around the world have received additional funding, while at other times, financial support has been lowered...
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SubjectTerms Behavior change
Budget constraint
Budgets
Budgets - organization & administration
Capitation
COVID-19
COVID-19 - epidemiology
Efficiency, Organizational
Financial support
Government spending
Health behavior
Health care
Health Care Rationing - economics
Health Care Rationing - organization & administration
Health economics
Health Equity - economics
Humans
laboratory experiment
Models, Theoretical
Pandemics
Patients
physician behavior
Physicians
Physicians - economics
prioritization
Profits
Resource allocation
resource scarcity
SARS-CoV-2
Scarcity
Severity of Illness Index
social preferences
Title Resource scarcity and prioritization decisions in medical care: A lab experiment with heterogeneous patient types
URI https://www.econstor.eu/handle/10419/241267
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002%2Fhec.4192
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33184985
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Volume 30
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