Institute for Economic and Social Research

Vol. 62 | Seminar

2017-10-13

Title: Patient Violance and the Provision of Medical Services 

Speaker: Assistant Professor Xin Zhao, University of International Business and Economics

Time: October 11th, 2017 15:15–16:45

Venue: Conference Room 106, Zhonghui Building (College of Economics, JNU)

Abstract:

“Defensive medicine” is seen as one of the major drivers of high health expenditure. In this paper, we study economic and non-economic events that may lead to changes in supplier behavior of medical professionals. Specifically, we examine how physicians in a large hospital in China respond to medical disputes and settlement payments as well as news reports on patient violence. In particular we study the event of a murder of a physician where the perpetrator blamed his surgeon for refusing to operate on him and thus causing great suffering. Administrative records on internet search history confirm that this incident led to a drastic increase in the volume of media coverage and public attention on patient-physician relationship immediately after the event. This event, taking place in a different city from the location of the hospital we study, led to an increase in defensive medicine including the number of operations. The health outcomes have deteriorated, indicating that this non-economic incentive dramatically changed supplier behavior without any health benefit. We provide evidence for similar cases and compare these behavior changes to reports on medical misconduct settlements at the hospital.



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