Affiliation:
1. School of Management Hefei University of Technology Hefei China
2. Key Laboratory of Process Optimization and Intelligent Decision‐making of Ministry of Education Hefei China
3. Department of Information Systems and Operations Management, Warrington College of Business University of Florida Gainesville Florida United States
Abstract
AbstractThe medical insurance payment system (MIPS) is a key mechanism to ensure the public's access to medical services. In a game‐theoretic model, we examine the impact of two MIPSs, fee‐for‐service (FFS) and diagnosis‐related groups (DRG), on patient choices, provider behavior, and out‐of‐pocket rate. We find that neither FFS nor DRG can dominate the other in all three aspects: social welfare, provider profit, and total patient surplus. In particular, under DRG, the out‐of‐pocket rate for patients is lower, and the total patient surplus is higher than that under FFS. However, patients with lower illness severity tend to not participate in DRG, while FFS can make all patients participate in the program. Furthermore, when the marginal cost of medical services is high, the profit of the provider and social welfare under DRG is higher than those under FFS, otherwise lower. After interviewing hospital leaders, we further investigate two extended (pilot) payment systems: DRG with two price groups, and the hybrid model incorporating both FFS and DRG. We find that both models contribute to improving provider behavior, making more patients choose the provider, but are still not perfect payment systems due to lower provider profit or social welfare. Our findings offer important insights for policymakers regarding implementing medical insurance reform in practice.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Subject
Management of Technology and Innovation,Information Systems and Management,Strategy and Management,General Business, Management and Accounting
Cited by
2 articles.
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