Are quality-adjusted medical prices declining for chronic disease? Evidence from diabetes care in four health systems

Karen Eggleston, Brian K. Chen, Chih Hung Chen, Ying Isabel Chen, Talitha Feenstra, Toshiaki Iizuka, Janet Tin Kei Lam, Gabriel M. Leung, Jui fen Rachel Lu, Beatriz Rodriguez-Sanchez, Jeroen N. Struijs, Jianchao Quan*, Joseph P. Newhouse

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: 期刊稿件文章同行評審

7 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

Improvements in medical treatment have contributed to rising health spending. Yet there is relatively little evidence on whether the spending increase is “worth it” in the sense of producing better health outcomes of commensurate value—a critical question for understanding productivity in the health sector and, as that sector grows, for deriving an accurate quality-adjusted price index for an entire economy. We analyze individual-level panel data on medical spending and health outcomes for 123,548 patients with type 2 diabetes in four health systems: Japan, The Netherlands, Hong Kong and Taiwan. Using a “cost-of-living” method that measures value based on improved survival, we find a positive net value of diabetes care: the value of improved survival outweighs the added costs of care in each of the four health systems. This finding is robust to accounting for selective survival, end-of-life spending, and a range of values for a life-year or fraction of benefits attributable to medical care. Since the estimates do not include the value from improved quality of life, they are conservative. We, therefore, conclude that the increase in medical spending for management of diabetes is offset by an increase in quality.

原文英語
頁(從 - 到)689-702
頁數14
期刊European Journal of Health Economics
21
發行號5
DOIs
出版狀態已出版 - 01 07 2020

文獻附註

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

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