journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38219527/the-impact-of-scope-of-practice-restrictions-on-access-to-medical-care
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jiapei Guo, Angela E Kilby, Mindy S Marks
We study the impact of scope-of-practice laws in a highly regulated and important policy setting, the provision of medication-assisted treatment for opioid use disorder. We consider two natural experiments generated by policy changes at the state and federal level that allow nurse practitioners more practice autonomy. Both experiments show that liberalizations of prescribing authority lead to large improvements in access to care. Further, we use rich address-level data to answer key policy questions. Expanding nurse practitioner prescribing authority reduces urban-rural disparities in health care access...
January 5, 2024: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38183949/do-responses-to-news-matter-evidence-from-interventional-cardiology
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Avdic, Stephanie von Hinke, Bo Lagerqvist, Carol Propper, Johan Vikström
We examine physician responses to a global information shock and how these impact their patients. We exploit international news over the safety of an innovation in healthcare, the drug-eluting stent. We use data on interventional cardiologists' use of stents to define and measure cardiologists' responsiveness to the initial positive news and link this to their patients' outcomes. We find substantial heterogeneity in responsiveness to news. Patients treated by cardiologists who respond slowly to the initial positive news have fewer adverse outcomes...
January 5, 2024: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38113755/socioeconomic-status-and-access-to-mental-health-care-the-case-of-psychiatric-medications-for-children-in-ontario-canada
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Janet Currie, Paul Kurdyak, Jonathan Zhang
We examine differences in the prescribing of psychiatric medications to lower-income and higher-income children in the Canadian province of Ontario using rich administrative data that includes diagnosis codes and physician identifiers. Our most striking finding is that conditional on diagnosis and medical history, low-income children are more likely to be prescribed antipsychotics and benzodiazepines than higher-income children who see the same doctors. These are drugs with potentially dangerous side effects that ideally should be prescribed to children only under narrowly proscribed circumstances...
January 2024: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38113754/pharmaceutical-demand-response-to-utilization-management
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Oren Sarig
Prescription drug insurance increasingly imposes prior authorization (requiring providers to request coverage before claim approval) to manage utilization. Prior authorization has been criticized because of its administrative burden on providers. The primary alternative to managing utilization is imposing out-of-pocket (OOP) payment to incentivize beneficiaries to seek lower-cost care, effectively providing beneficiaries with partial insurance. Would beneficiaries prefer indirectly paying for prior authorization through higher premiums; or would they prefer prior authorization was replaced by higher OOP costs? This tradeoff depends on how much OOP costs could be displaced by prior authorization, which depends on their relative impact on demand...
January 2024: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38211459/sibling-spillovers-and-the-choice-to-get-vaccinated-evidence-from-a-regression-discontinuity-design
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Knoth Humlum, Marius Opstrup Morthorst, Peter Rønø Thingholm
We investigate the effects of introducing population-wide free-of-charge Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination programs on the targeted adolescent cohorts and their siblings. For identification, we rely on regression discontinuity designs and high-quality Danish administrative data to exploit that date of birth determines program eligibility. We find that the programs increased the HPV vaccine take-up of both the targeted children (53.2 percentage points for girls and 36.0 percentage points for boys) and their older same-sex siblings (4...
December 27, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38154202/distributionally-sensitive-measurement-and-valuation-of-population-health
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shaun Da Costa, Owen O'Donnell, Raf Van Gestel
We introduce a measure of population health that is sensitive to inequality in both age-specific health and lifespan and can be calculated from a health-extended period life table. By allowing for inequality aversion, the measure generalises health-adjusted life expectancy without requiring more data. A transformation of change in the (life-years) measure gives a distributionally sensitive monetary valuation of change in population health and disease burden. Application to Sub-Saharan Africa between 1990 and 2019 reveals that the change in population health is sensitive to allowing for lifespan inequality but is less sensitive to age-specific health inequality...
December 15, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38103348/do-risk-time-and-prosocial-preferences-predict-risky-sexual-behaviour-of-youths-in-a-low-income-high-risk-setting
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ranjeeta Thomas, Matteo M Galizzi, Louisa Moorhouse, Constance Nyamukapa, Timothy B Hallett
Young people in sub-Saharan Africa are particularly at high risk of sexually transmitted infections. Little is known about their preferences and even less about their association with risky sexual behaviour. We conducted incentivized economic experiments to measure risk, time and prosocial preferences in Zimbabwe. Preferences measured at baseline predict biomarker and self-reported measures of risky sexual behaviour gathered 12 months later. We find robust evidence that individuals more altruistic at baseline are more likely to be Herpes Simplex Virus Type-2 (HSV-2) positive 12 months later...
December 11, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38056032/valuing-life-over-the-life-cycle
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pascal St-Amour
Adjusting the valuation of life along the (i) person-specific (age, health, wealth) and (ii) mortality risk-specific (beneficial or detrimental, temporary or permanent changes) dimensions is relevant in prioritizing healthcare interventions. These adjustments are provided by solving a life cycle model of consumption, leisure and health choices and the associated Hicksian variations for mortality changes. The calibrated model yields plausible Values of Life Year between 154K$ and 200K$ and Values of Statistical Life close to 6...
December 1, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37883883/physician-responses-to-medicare-reimbursement-rates
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aileen M Devlin, Grace McCormack
This paper investigates how office-based physicians respond to Medicare reimbursement changes. Using variation from an Affordable Care Act policy that increased reimbursements for office-based care in four states, we use a triple difference analysis, comparing physicians with higher and lower reimbursement changes in treated states to similar physicians in untreated states. We find two mechanisms through which physicians respond. First, the reimbursement change affected integration-physicians with larger increases in office-based reimbursement were less likely to vertically integrate with hospitals and more likely to continue providing office-based care than physicians with smaller reimbursement increases...
December 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37995463/the-labour-market-returns-to-sleep
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joan Costa-Font, Sarah Fleche, Ricardo Pagan
Despite the growing prevalence of insufficient sleep among individuals, we still know little about the labour market return to sleep. To address this gap, we use longitudinal data from Germany and leverage exogenous fluctuations in sleep duration caused by variations in time and local sunset times. Our findings reveal that a one-hour increase in weekly sleep is associated with a 1.6 percentage point rise in employment and a 3.4% increase in weekly earnings. Such effect on earnings stems from productivity improvements given that the number of working hours decreases with longer sleep duration...
November 20, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37976788/reminder-design-and-childhood-vaccination-coverage
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonas Cuzulan Hirani, Miriam Wüst
A major policy concern across public vaccination programs is non-compliance. Exploiting Danish population data and three national reforms in regression discontinuity designs, we document the effects of reminders for childhood vaccination coverage. Retrospective reminders are primarily effective for families with small children and when sent out close to the recommended vaccination age. Digital and postal reminders are equally effective. Prospective reminders increase timely vaccinations in later childhood and help reaching high coverage for new vaccines in increasingly complex vaccination programs...
November 14, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38041894/the-effect-of-primary-healthcare-on-mortality-evidence-from-costa-rica
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Claudio A Mora-García, Madeline Pesec, Andrea M Prado
This paper uses the gradual implementation of a primary healthcare (PHC) intervention in Costa Rica to examine the long-term effect of PHC on mortality. Nine years after opening a primary care center, known as a Health Area, there was an associated 13% reduction in age-adjusted mortality rate in the assigned patient population. The effect was highest among adults over 65 years of age and for those with noncommunicable diseases, such as cardiovascular-related causes of death. We also show that as Health Areas opened, more individuals sought care at primary care clinics, while fewer sought care at emergency rooms; these changes may have partially mediated the effect of the intervention on mortality...
November 8, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37939411/how-do-hospitals-respond-to-input-regulation-evidence-from-the-california-nurse-staffing-mandate
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chandni Raja
Mandated minimum nurse-to-patient ratios have been the subject of active debate in the U.S. for over twenty years and are under legislative consideration today in several states and at the federal level. This paper uses the 1999 California nurse staffing mandate as an empirical setting to estimate the causal effects of minimum ratios on hospitals. Minimum ratios led to a 58 min increase in nursing time per patient day and 9 percent increase in the wage bill per patient day in the general medical/surgical acute care unit among treated hospitals...
November 6, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37897833/do-minimum-wage-laws-affect-employer-sponsored-insurance-provision
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark K Meiselbach, Jean M Abraham
Employers may respond to minimum wage increases by adjusting their health benefits. We examine the impact of state minimum wage increases on employer health benefit offerings using the 2002-2020 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey - Insurance/Employer Component data. Our primary regression specifications are difference-in-differences models that estimate the relationship between within-state changes in employer-sponsored insurance and minimum wage laws over time. We find that a $1 increase in minimum wages is associated with a 0...
October 26, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37913647/does-informal-care-delay-nursing-home-entry-evidence-from-dutch-linked-survey-and-administrative-data
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julien Bergeot, Marianne Tenand
We assess whether informal care receipt affects the probability of transitioning to a nursing home. Available evidence derives from the US, where nursing home stays are often temporary. Exploiting linked survey and administrative data from the Netherlands, we use the gender mix of children to retrieve exogenous variation in informal care receipt. We find that informal care increases the chance of an admission within a three-year period for individuals with severe functional limitations, and increases the costs incurred on formal home care...
October 20, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37866291/the-long-term-effects-of-early-life-pollution-exposure-evidence-from-the-london-smog
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie von Hinke, Emil N Sørensen
This paper uses a large UK cohort to investigate the impact of early-life pollution exposure on individuals' human capital and health outcomes in older age. We compare individuals who were exposed to the London smog in December 1952 whilst in utero or in infancy to those born after the smog and those born at the same time but in unaffected areas. We find that those exposed to the smog have substantially lower fluid intelligence and worse respiratory health, with some evidence of a reduction in years of schooling...
October 16, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37865028/tax-incidence-for-menthol-cigarettes-by-race-evidence-from-nielsen-homescan-data
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hyunchul Kim, Dongwon Lee
We use Nielsen Homescan data to examine whether the incidence of cigarette taxes on menthol products varies with race. We find that taxes are shifted at significantly lower rates to Black smokers of menthol cigarettes than any other smokers. One possible explanation is that the industry targets price promotions to Black menthol smokers because they tend to be more responsive to cigarette prices relative to other smokers. We find evidence that Black smokers receive significantly more price discounts for menthol products than white menthol smokers...
October 6, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37871470/physician-patient-race-match-reduces-patient-mortality
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew J Hill, Daniel B Jones, Lindsey Woodworth
This paper assesses the impacts of physician-patient race-match, especially Black patients paired with Black physicians, on patient mortality. We draw on administrative data from Florida, linking hospital encounters from mid-2011 through 2014 to information from the Florida Physician Workforce Survey. Focusing on uninsured patients experiencing unscheduled hospital admissions who are conditionally randomly assigned to physicians, we find that physician-patient race-match for Black patients reduces the likelihood of within-hospital mortality by 0...
October 4, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37857116/consequences-of-a-shortage-and-rationing-evidence-from-a-pediatric-vaccine
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eli Liebman, Emily C Lawler, Abe Dunn, David B Ridley
Shortages and rationing are common in health care, yet we know little about the consequences. We examine an 18-month shortage of the pediatric Haemophilus Influenzae Type B (Hib) vaccine. Using insurance claims data and variation in shortage exposure across birth cohorts, we find that the shortage reduced uptake of high-value primary doses by 4 percentage points and low-value booster doses by 26 percentage points. This suggests providers largely complied with rationing recommendations. In the long-run, catch-up vaccination occurred but was incomplete: shortage-exposed cohorts were 4 percentage points less likely to have received the ir booster dose years later...
September 29, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37857117/inequality-in-the-golden-years-wealth-gradients-in-disability-free-and-work-free-longevity-in-the-united-states
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hessam Bavafa, Anita Mukherjee, Tyler Q Welch
We study the relationship of wealth with the "quality" of longevity as measured by years after age 65 containing disability or work. By comparing cohorts turning 65 in 1996 and 2006, we observe strong within-cohort gradients of wealth in which the more wealthy live more years disability-free and work more years, yet also experience more work-free years. We document that these gradients steepened over the decade we study. We explore robustness using education as an alternative indicator for socioeconomic status, and rule out certain explanations for these trends by analyzing the effect of health shocks on wealth accumulation...
September 26, 2023: Journal of Health Economics
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