Doctor competence and the demand for healthcare : evidence from rural China
Fe, Eduardo and Powell-Jackson, Timothy and Yip, Winnie (2017) Doctor competence and the demand for healthcare : evidence from rural China. Health Economics, 26 (10). pp. 1177-1190. ISSN 1057-9230 (https://doi.org/10.1002/hec.3387)
Preview |
Text.
Filename: Fe_etal_HE_2016_Doctor_competence_and_the_demand_for_healthcare_evidence_from_rural_China.pdf
Accepted Author Manuscript Download (432kB)| Preview |
Abstract
The agency problem between patients and doctors has long been emphasised in the health economics literature, but the empirical evidence on whether patients can evaluate and respond to better quality care remains mixed and inconclusive. Using household data linked to an assessment of village doctors' clinical competence in rural China, we show that there is no correlation between doctor competence and patients' healthcare utilisation, with confidence intervals reasonably tight around zero. Household perceptions of quality are an important determinant of care seeking behaviour yet patients appear unable to recognise more competent doctors -there is no relationship between doctor competence and perceptions of quality.
ORCID iDs
Fe, Eduardo ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7693-9143, Powell-Jackson, Timothy and Yip, Winnie;-
-
Item type: Article ID code: 56686 Dates: DateEvent31 October 2017Published15 August 2016Published Online15 June 2016AcceptedSubjects: Medicine Department: Strathclyde Business School > Economics Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 16 Jun 2016 15:51 Last modified: 26 Nov 2024 01:10 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/56686