This study shows that, in an unregulated fee-setting environment, specialist physicians practise price discrimination on the basis of their patients' income status. Our results are consistent with profit maximisation behaviour by specialists. These findings are based on a large population survey that is linked to administrative medical claims records. We find that, for an initial consultation, specialist physicians charge their high-income patients AU$26 more than their low-income patients. While this gap equates to a 19% lower fees for the poorest patients (bottom 25% of the household income distribution), it is unlikely to remove the substantial financial barriers they face in accessing specialist care. There are large variations across specialties, with neurologists exhibiting the largest fee gap between the high-income and low-income patients. Several possible channels for deducing the patient's income are examined. We find that patient characteristics such as age, health concession card status and private health insurance status are all used by specialists as proxies for income status. These characteristics are particularly important to further practise price discrimination among the low-income patients but are less relevant for the high-income patients. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

译文

:这项研究表明,在不受监管的费用设定环境中,专科医生根据患者的收入状况实行价格歧视。我们的结果与专家的利润最大化行为一致。这些发现基于与行政医疗索赔记录相关联的大规模人口调查。我们发现,在初步咨询中,专科医生向高收入患者收取的费用比低收入患者高出26澳元。虽然这一差距意味着最贫困患者的费用降低了19%(家庭收入分配的最低25%),但不可能消除他们在获得专科护理方面面临的巨大财务障碍。各专业之间差异很大,神经科医师在高收入和低收入患者之间的费用差距最大。研究了几种推断患者收入的可能途径。我们发现,诸如年龄,健康优惠卡状态和私人健康保险状态之类的患者特征均被专家用作收入状态的代理。这些特征对于在低收入患者中进一步实行价格歧视特别重要,但与高收入患者的相关性较小。版权所有©2016 John Wiley&Sons,Ltd.

+1
+2
100研值 100研值 ¥99课程
检索文献一次
下载文献一次

去下载>

成功解锁2个技能,为你点赞

《SCI写作十大必备语法》
解决你的SCI语法难题!

技能熟练度+1

视频课《玩转文献检索》
让你成为检索达人!

恭喜完成新手挑战

手机微信扫一扫,添加好友领取

免费领《Endnote文献管理工具+教程》

微信扫码, 免费领取

手机登录

获取验证码
登录