Deakin University
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Behavioral Responses to Healthcare Funding Decisions and Their Impact on Value for Money: Evidence From Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-07, 04:56 authored by P Ghijben, D Petrie, Silva ZavarsekSilva Zavarsek, G Chen, E Lancsar
ABSTRACTValue for money is fundamental to health insurance schemes given insurers must choose which treatments to fund. Assessing value for money ex ante is challenging, however, because costs and outcomes depend on how treatments are used. Estimates often rely on evidence from early randomized controlled trials conducted prior to regulatory approval, where provider and patient behaviors are tightly controlled. This approach ignores how different supply conditions and incentives in practice influence behaviors. This paper considers how provider and patient incentives can differ between trial and practice settings and analyses how healthcare use changed when new prostate cancer treatments were funded on the public health insurance scheme in Australia. We find evidence that doctors treated patients with worse prognosis compared to the trials, patients ceased prior treatment and switched to the new treatments earlier than expected, and treatment duration was longer than expected. These and other behavioral responses reduced value for money ex post. Our findings suggest that health insurers should carefully consider the supply conditions and incentives in practice when funding new treatments.

History

Journal

Health Economics

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

1057-9230

eISSN

1099-1050

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley