Empirical Models of Demand for Out-Patient Physician Services and Their Relevance to the Assessment of Patient Payment Policies: A Critical Review of the Literature
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. General Characteristics of the Selected Publications
3.2. Specificity of the Data Collection Process
3.3. Specificity of the Data Analysis
3.4. Major Findings Reported in the Selected Publications
4. Discussion
4.1. The Approach to Modeling
4.2. Variables Included in Demand Models
4.3. The Empirical Results
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
References
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Characteristic of the publication | Number of publications (%)* | Publication reference number |
---|---|---|
Year of publication | ||
2005–until present | 11 (24) | [15,18,27,31,32,39,42–44,46,51] |
2000–2004 | 10 (22) | [19,23,26,30,41,48,50,52,54,55] |
1995–1999 | 7 (15) | [16,21,22,28,37,45,56] |
1990–1994 | 4 (9) | [13,29,36,47] |
1985–1989 | 7 (15) | [12,17,20,33,38,40,57] |
1984 and before | 7 (15) | [14,24,25,34,35,49,53] |
Not clear | - | - |
Origin of the study | ||
Africa | 7 (15) | [19,27–29,41,47,48] |
Asia | 9 (20) | [12,15,16,22,37,42–44,46] |
Europe | 12 (26) | [20,21,23,31,32,45,50–55] |
North America | 18 (39) | [13,14,17,18,20,24–26,30,34–36,38–40,49,56,57] |
South America | 1 (2) | [33] |
Australia and New Zealand | - | - |
Not clear | - | - |
Original research setting | ||
Households | 24 (52) | [12,13,15,17,19,24,26,27–29,33,36,38,40,41,43–48,51,54,56] |
Health care organizations | 5 (11) | [12,16,36,42,53] |
Other | 13 (28) | [14,17,18,20,23,34–37,50,52,55,57] |
Not clear | 5 (11) | [22,25,32,39,49] |
Aim of the study | ||
To model demand/use of physician services | 11 (24) | [15,17,19,25,26,29,34,43,46,53,56] |
To analyze the impact of health insurance | 5 (11) | [18,21,30,32,39] |
To assess the impact of patient payments | 28 (61) | [13,14,16,20,22–24,27,28,31,33,35–38,40–42,44,47–52,54,55,57] |
To model the choice of provider | 3 (7) | [12,27,45] |
Not clear | - | - |
Characteristics of the data collection | Number of publications (%)* | Publication reference number |
---|---|---|
Study design | ||
Controlled experiment | 4 (9) | [13,26,38,40] |
Natural experiment | 6 (13) | [19–21,23,51,52] |
Panel or pooled cross-section | 13 (28) | [14,15,18,30,32,34–37,49,54,55] |
Cross-sectional study | 23 (50) | [12,16,17,22,24,25,27–29,31,33,39,41–48,53,56,57] |
Not clear | - | - |
Study population | ||
All consumer groups | 10 (22) | [17,19,26,29,31,32,38,40,45,57] |
Specific age group (e.g., children, adults) | 7 (15) | [13,15,22,25,34,44,56] |
Specific gender group (male, female) | 2 (4) | [24,36] |
Specific social group (e.g., poor, rural, insured) | 14 (30) | [12,14,18,20,21,23,30,35,37,39,46,49,52,54,55] |
Patients only or those with health problems | 12 (26) | [16,27,28,33,34,36,41,42,44,48,53] |
Not clear | 1 (2) | [50] |
Sample selection | ||
At random | 9 (20) | [13–17,36,47,51,54] |
Stratified random | 10 (22) | [12,19,24,27,29,38,40,41,46,57] |
Convenient sample | 12 (26) | [13,20,22,28,30,35,37,44,48,49,53,55] |
Specific group (e.g., workers, poor, pregnant) | 3 (7) | [21,26,39] |
Not clear | 12 (26) | [23,25,31–34,36,43,45,50,52,56] |
Sample size | ||
Less than 1000 respondents | 8 (17) | [12,22,24,25,27,34,42,44] |
1000–10,000 respondents | 24 (52) | [13–16,18,21,28,29,32,33,36,38–41,46–50,54,56,57] |
More than 10,000 respondents | 12 (26) | [19,20,23,26,30,31,35,37,43,51,53,55] |
Not clear | 2 (4) | [17,52] |
Response rate | ||
50%–70% | 1 (2) | [42] |
More than 70% | 4 (9) | [15,24,29,38] |
Not reported | 41 (89) | [12–14,16–23,25–28,30–37,39–41,43–57] |
Methods of data collection | ||
Face-to-face interview | 7 (15) | [17,19,24,27,29,41,50] |
Telephone interview | 1 (2) | [50] |
Patients records, administrative files, claims | 19 (41) | [13–18,20,21,23,30,34–38,40,52,53,55] |
Existing dataset (e.g., national surveys) | 20 (43) | [12,13,22,25,26,28,33,36,39,43–47,51,54,56,57] |
Questionnaire | 5 (11) | [38,40–42,50] |
Not clear | 1 (2) | [49] |
Characteristics of the demand modelling | Number of publications (%)* | Publication reference number |
---|---|---|
Overall approach | ||
Based on revealed preferences | 45 (98) | [12–41,43–57] |
Based on stated preferences | 1 (2) | [42] |
Mixed approach | - | - |
Not clear | - | - |
Nature of the dependent variable | ||
Probability of visiting a physician | 22 (48) | [13,15,16,19,21,24,25,29,30,32,37,39,40,42,44,45,47,49,51,53,55,57] |
Number of visits to physician | 22 (48) | [13,14,17,18,20,23–26,30,31,34–37,49–54,56] |
Expenditure on physician visits | 8 (17) | [18,30,36,39,40,54,55,57] |
Number/cost of episodes of treatment | 3 (7) | [13,37,38] |
Type of provider chosen | 13 (28) | [12,19,22,24,27–29,33,41,43,45,46,48] |
Not clear | - | - |
Independent and control variables | ||
Size of patient payments (direct) ** | 39 (85) | [12–21,23,24,26,27,29–33,35–44,47,46,49,50,52–57] |
Other payments (e.g., indirect, travel, waiting) | 19 (41) | [12,17–19,22,24,25,29,31,34,41–43,45–47,48,56,57] |
Provider characteristics (e.g., location, quality) | 17 (37) | [12,17,18,22,25,29,31,33,34,36,41–44,46,48,53] |
Consumer demographic features | 46 (100) | [12–57] |
Consumer health status | 33 (72) | [12,13,15–17,22,24–27,29–34,36,38–46,50,51,53–57] |
Consumer socio-economic features | 40 (87) | [12–15,17,19,20,22,23,25–27,29–34,36–57] |
Consumer family features | 28 (61) | [14,15,17,20–23,25,26,29,36–44,46–49,51,54–57] |
Consumer insurance status | 17 (37) | [12,16,24–26,29–31,34,36,37,39,46,52,54–56] |
Consumer behavioral habits | 5 (11) | [15,32,45,50,51] |
Attitudes/perceptions | 2 (4) | [24,53] |
Quality of care perception | 6 (13) | [25,27,41,42,48,54] |
Availability of informal providers | 1 (2) | [15] |
Prices of other goods (e.g., food, services) | 1 (2) | [43] |
Not clear | 1 (2) | [28] |
Stages in the modelling process | ||
One stage modelling | 28 (61) | [12–16,18,21–25,27,28,31–33,36,37,41–44,46,47,50,52,53,56] |
Multiple stages modelling | 18 (39) | [19,26,29,30,36,39,40,45,48,51,54,55,57] |
Not clear | - | - |
Analytical model | ||
Least squares (OLS/2SLS/GLS/RE/FE/DiD) | 18 (39) | [13,14,18,20,23,25,30,34,36–38,40,49,52–55,57] |
Multinomial/Nested/Conditional Logit | 13 (28) | [12,19,22,24,27–29,33,41,43,45,46,48] |
Binary Logit/Probit | 15 (33) | [13,15,21,25,30,36,37,39,40,44,47,51,53,55,57] |
Tobit | 2 (4) | [24,53] |
Count data model | 7 (15) | [17,26,31,50,51,54,56] |
Duration model | 3 (7) | [15,16,42] |
ANOVA, ACONOVA | 2 (4) | [35,40] |
GLM | 2 (4) | [39,55] |
GMM | 1 (2) | [50] |
Non-parametric estimation | 1 (2) | [32] |
Not clear | - | - |
Other statistical methods | ||
Simulation methods | 13 (28) | [16,19,26,29–31,33,38,41,43–45,48] |
Descriptive statistics | 32 (70) | [12,13,15–20,22,23,25,27,29–31,32,36–39,41,42,44,46,48,49,51–55,57] |
Chi-square, T or F-test | 11 (24) | [20,21,23,26,27,35,39,40,45,51,52] |
Not reported | 5 (11) | [14,28,34,47,56] |
Goodness-of-fit statistics | ||
Reported | 33 (72) | [13–16,18,19,23–27,29,31,34–38,41,42,44–49,51–55,57] |
Not reported | 13 (28) | [12,17,20–22,28,30,32,33,39,40,43,56] |
Summary of major findings | Number of publications (%)* | Publication reference number |
---|---|---|
Changes in quantity demanded due to changes in price (i.e., patient payment) | ||
Significant in general | 30 (65) | [13,16,18,20,22,27–35,36,38,40,41,43,44,46–49,52–57] |
Significant for certain parameters or groups | 6 (13) | [19,23–25,37,39] |
Statistically insignificant | 4 (9) | [12,15,21,51] |
Not clear | 6 (13) | [14,17,26,42,45,50] |
Not reported | - | - |
Price elasticity of demand (average value reported) | ||
Less than 0.10 | 8 (17) | [15,17,18,23,24,32,34,54] |
0.10–0.50 | 16 (35) | [16,25,26,28,31,34,36,38–40,43,44,46,52,55–57] |
0.51–0.99 | 3 (7) | [33,47,48] |
1 or higher | 2 (4) | [22,47] |
Not clear | 7 (15) | [13,14,19,20,27,35,41] |
Not reported | 10 (22) | [12,21,29,30,37,42,45,49,50,53] |
Significant determinants of price elasticity of demand | ||
Consumer income | 18 (39) | [14,19,22,23,25,27,33,34,36,40,42–48,52] |
Consumer demographic features | 5 (11) | [20,23,42,47,53] |
Consumer health status | 5 (11) | [16,20,38,42,57] |
Opportunity costs, time | 1 (2) | [45] |
Provider characteristics (e.g., services, quality) | 14 (30) | [13,16,19,20,25,27,31,34,41,42,45,46,54,55] |
Insurance status (type of coverage) | 2 (4) | [39,54] |
Availability/price of other services/goods | 8 (17) | [18,23,31,33,35,43,45,48] |
Magnitude of service price | 3 (7) | [26,42,54] |
Not reported | 12 (26) | [12,17,21,26,28–30,32,37,50,51,53,56] |
Significant determinants of demand other than price (i.e., other than patient payments) | ||
Consumer income | 15 (33) | [12–15,19,24,25,27,29,34,36,40,46,54,57] |
Consumer demographic features | 26 (57) | [13,15–17,22,25,27,29,31,35,37–39,41–49,50,53,55–57] |
Consumer social features | 11 (24) | [15,22,25,29,31,33,37,53,54,56,57] |
Consumer health status | 21 (46) | [12,15–17,24,27,29,30,36,38,39,43–46,50,51,53–57] |
Consumer family features | 9 (20) | [22,25,27,39,41,47,54,56,57] |
Consumer insurance status | 6 (13) | [16,29,36,39,50,59] |
Payments for other health care services | 2 (4) | [12,18] |
Non-monetary expenses (opportunity costs) | 12 (26) | [17,22,24,31,33,42–46,48,56,57] |
Provider characteristics (e.g., services, quality) | 11 (24) | [17,22,25,29,31,34,41–43,48,53,54] |
Availability of other health care services | 2 (4) | [15,45] |
Not reported | 7 (15) | [20,21,23,26,28,32,52] |
Validity, reliability and generalizability of the results | ||
Reliability is clear | 19 (41) | [13,15,18,23,29–31,38–40,46,47,48,50,52–55,57] |
Reliability is uncertain | 22 (48) | [12,14,16,17,19–21,24–27,30,32–37,41,42,44,45,51] |
Reliability is not analyzed | 5 (11) | [22,28,43,49,56] |
Validity is clear | 17 (37) | [15,16,23,26,27,31,36,38,41,42,46,47,51,52,54,55,57] |
Validity is uncertain | 29 (63) | [12–14,17–22,24,25,28–30,32–35,37,39,40,43–45,47–49,50,53,56] |
Validity is not analyzed | - | - |
Generalizability is clear | 7 (15) | [12,16,29,38,40,42,57] |
Genelizability is uncertain | 19 (41) | [14,15,18,21–24,27,28,36,37,39,41,46,47,51,52,55] |
Generalizablity is not analyzed | 20 (43) | [13,17,19,20,25,26,30–35,43–45,48–50,53,54,56] |
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Skriabikova, O.; Pavlova, M.; Groot, W. Empirical Models of Demand for Out-Patient Physician Services and Their Relevance to the Assessment of Patient Payment Policies: A Critical Review of the Literature. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2010, 7, 2708-2725. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7062708
Skriabikova O, Pavlova M, Groot W. Empirical Models of Demand for Out-Patient Physician Services and Their Relevance to the Assessment of Patient Payment Policies: A Critical Review of the Literature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2010; 7(6):2708-2725. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7062708
Chicago/Turabian StyleSkriabikova, Olga, Milena Pavlova, and Wim Groot. 2010. "Empirical Models of Demand for Out-Patient Physician Services and Their Relevance to the Assessment of Patient Payment Policies: A Critical Review of the Literature" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 7, no. 6: 2708-2725. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7062708
APA StyleSkriabikova, O., Pavlova, M., & Groot, W. (2010). Empirical Models of Demand for Out-Patient Physician Services and Their Relevance to the Assessment of Patient Payment Policies: A Critical Review of the Literature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 7(6), 2708-2725. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph7062708