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Demand for Medical Services
Part 2
Health Economics
Professor Vivian Ho
Fall 2009
These notes draw from material in Santerre & Neun, Health Economics, Theories,
Insights and Industry Studies. Southwestern Cengate 2010
Outline
Empirical estimates of demand from the
literature
 Practice problems
 The RAND Health Insurance
Experiment
 Example: Interpreting results from a
regression on abortion demand

Estimating Demand for Medical Care

Quantity demanded = f( … )
 out-of-pocket
 real
price
income
 time costs
 prices of substitutes and complements
 tastes and preferences
 profile
 state of health
 quality of care
Empirical Evidence

Demand for primary care services
(prevention, early detection, & treatment
of disease) has been found to be price
inelastic
 Estimates
tend to be in the -.1 to -.7 range
 A 10%  in the out-of-pocket price of
hospital or physician services leads to a 1
to 7% decrease in quantity demanded
 Ceteris paribus, total expenditures on
hospital and physician services increase
with a greater out-of-pocket price
Empirical Evidence (cont.)

Demand for other types of medical care
is slightly more price elastic than
demand for primary care

Consumers should be more price
sensitive as the portion of the bill paid
out of pocket increases
Out-of-Pocket Payments in the U.S.
1970 1980
2000
2007
National health expenditures ($b) $74.9 $253.4 $1,353.2 $2,241.2
% out of pocket
33.2% 22.9%
14.2%
12.0%
 Hypothesis: Consumers are more price
sensitive if they pay a larger % of the health
care bill
 The fall in the % of out-of-pocket
payments may explain the rapid rise in
health care costs
Out-of-Pocket Payments in the U.S.
Total Expenditures and % Paid Out-of-Pocket, 2007
Hospital care
Physician Services
Prescription Drugs
Nursing Home Care
Dental
$696.5
476.6
227.5
190.4
$95.20
3.3%
10.4%
20.9%
18.5%
44.2%
 Hypothesis: Consumers are more price
sensitive if they pay a larger % of the health
care bill
 Higher hospital and physician expenditures
may be due to the low % paid out-of-pocket
Out-of-Pocket Payments in the U.S. (cont.)

The previous 2 slides argue that:
 insurance coverage   expenditures

But it may be the opposite:
 expenditures   insurance coverage.

We cannot identify a causal effect
using just this data
Empirical Evidence (cont.)

Studies which have examined price and
quantity variation within service types
have found that:
 The
price elasticity of demand for dental
services for females is -.5 to -.7
 The own-price elasticity of demand for
nursing home services is between -.73 and
-2.4
Empirical Evidence (cont.)

At the individual level, the income
elasticity of demand for medical
services is below +1.0

The travel time elasticity of demand is
almost as large as the own-price
elasticity of demand

Little consensus on whether hospital
care and ambulatory physician services
are substitutes or complements
International Estimates of Income
Elasticity

Are health care expenditures destined to
consume a larger portion of GDP as GDP
grows?

Regression Analysis
 Sample - developed countries
Ln(Real per capita
health expenditures)
 Estimates
= a+b
Ln(Real per
capita income)
of b range between 1.13 and 1.31
+e
Applying Demand Theory to Real
Data
• Demand analyses in health care must take
insurance into account
•
Demand analyses are critical in shaping
managerial and public policy decisions
The Rand Health Insurance
Experiment

A large, social science experiment to study
individuals’ medical care under insurance

A large sample of families were provided
differing levels of health insurance coverage
 Researchers
then studied their subsequent
health care use
The Sample
• 5,809 individuals, under 65
• 6 sites (Dayton OH, Seattle WA, Fitchburg MA,
Charlston SC, Georgetown County SC, Franklin
County MA)
• 1974 – 1977
• Cost : $80 million
Insurance Plans in the
Experiment
1. Free fee-for-service (FFS).
- i.e., no coinsurance
2. 25% copayment per physician visit
3. 50% copayment per physician visit
4. 95% copayment per physician visit
Insurance Plans in the
Experiment
5. Individual deductible
- $150 deductible for physician visits; all
subsequent visits free
6. HMO
- Not the same as free fee-for-service
- Since HMO receives a fixed annual fee, it seeks
to limit physician visits
Table 3.3. Sample Means for Annual Use of
Medical Services per Capita
Plans*
Face-to- Outpatient Inpatient Total
Face Visits Expenses Dollars Expenses
(1984 $)
Free
25%
50%
95%
Individual
deductible
(1984 $)
(1984 $)
Probability
Using Any
Medical Service
4.55
3.33
3.03
2.73
340
260
224
203
409
373
450
315
749
634
674
518
86.8
78.8
77.2
67.7
3.02
235
373
608
72.3
* The chi-square test was used to test the null hypothesis of no difference among
the five plan means. In each instance, the chi-square statistic was significant to
at least 5 percent level. The only exception was for inpatient dollars
Source : Willard G. Manning et al. “Health Insurance and the Demand for
Medical Care : Evidence from a Randomized Experiment,” American Economic
Review 77 (June 1987), Table 2
Results (cont.)

No statistically significant difference in
inpatient (hospital) expenses by insurance
type
 Does
NOT necessarily imply inelastic demand
for hospital services
 Experiment included $1,000 cap on out-ofpocket medical expenses; 70% of hospital
admissions costs $1,000 +
O As coinsurance ‘s, probability of ANY use ‘s
Results (cont.)
Own Price Elasticity of Demand
All Care
Copay 0-25%
Copay 25-95%
•
- 0.10
- 0.14
Outpatient Care
- 0.13
- 0.21
As consumers’ copayments drop, demand for
medical care becomes more price inelastic
 The data confirms the theory
Results (cont.)
 Free fee-for-service (FFS) versus HMO
coverage
 No difference in physician visits found
 But only 7.1% of HMO patients admitted
to hospital, versus 11.2% of FFS patients
• HMO patients cost 30% less than FFS patients
on average
• HMO’s do save money relative to FFS
Health Implications
 The experiment verifies that coinsurance
demand for medical care
 What are the implications for health
outcomes?
 i.e restraining medical care expenditures is not
the only objective we care about, especially for
the poor
Health Implications (cont.)
 Poor adults (lowest 20% of income distribution)
with high blood pressure experienced clinically
significant improvement under free FFS plan,
but not in cost sharing plan
 Similar findings for myopia, dental health
 Free FFS only improves health outcomes in 3
specific cases versus cost-sharing
 If want to restrain costs and maintain health,
targeted programs at these 3 health problems is
more cost-effective than free care for all
services
Was it worth it?
 Rand Health Insurance Experiment cost $80
million
 Initial results published in 1981
 In the next 2 years, # of insurance companies with
first-dollar coinsurance for hospital care
increased from 30% to 63%
 # of insurance companies w/ annual deductible of
$200 + per person ‘d from 4% to 21%
 Estimated cost saving from ‘d demand for
medical care = $7 billion
 Government sponsored studies often yield important
knowledge for business
Conclusions
Our economic model of demand
provides hypotheses that we can test
with real data
 Although it is difficult to measure the
quantity of medical services demanded
and economic variables, both price and
income effects are important
determinants of the demand for medical
care
