100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Book Health Economics & Policy (Bhattacharya, 2014) + book exercises, and 7 mandatory articles

Rating
-
Sold
7
Pages
75
Uploaded on
08-02-2022
Written in
2021/2022

Summary of the book of Bhattacharya (2014) for the course Health Economics and Policy and compulsory articles (total of 7), provided at the University of Groningen. Includes book exercises + book answers. Passed the exam with a 10.0.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Connected book

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Chapters 3, 4 ,chapter 15 through 18, chapter 23, 24
Uploaded on
February 8, 2022
Number of pages
75
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Health Economics and Policy
Book + Article Summary
2021-2022

, 2


TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER 15: THE HEALTH POLICY CONUNDRUM ....................................................................... 3

CHAPTER 16: THE BEVERIDGE MODEL: NATIONALIZED HEALTHCARE ........................... 11

CHAPTER 17: THE BISMARCK MODEL: SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE ................................ 16

CHAPTER 18: THE AMERICAN MODEL: PRIVATE INSURANCE ............................................... 19

CHAPTER 3: DEMAND FOR HEALTH: THE GROSSMAN MODEL ............................................. 24

CHAPTER 4: SOCIOECONOMIC DISPARITIES IN HEALTH ........................................................ 35

CHAPTER 23: FUNDAMENTALS OF PROSPECT THEORY ........................................................... 41

CHAPTER 24: TIME INCONSISTENCY AND HEALTH ................................................................... 42

ARTICLE 1: KILLING ME SOFTLY: THE FETAL ORIGINS HYPOTHESIS ............................... 50

ARTICLE 2: CHAPTER 3.2. AGING: HEALTH AT ADVANCED AGES ........................................ 53

ARTICLE 3: CRITICAL PERIODS DURING CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCE .................... 57

ARTICLE 4: SMALL STEPS, BIG CHANGE. FORGING A PUBLIC-PRIVATE HEALTH
INSURANCE SYSTEM IN THE NETHERLANDS ............................................................................... 61

ARTICLE 5: NEIGHBORHOOD SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS AND HEALTH CARE COSTS: A
POPULATION-WIDE STUDY IN THE NETHERLANDS. .................................................................. 65

ARTICLE 6: ON THE CONCEPT OF HEALTH CAPITAL AND THE DEMAND FOR HEALTH
....................................................................................................................................................................... 67

ARTICLE 7: WHY IS THE TEEN BIRTH RATE IN THE UNITED STATES SO HIGH AND
WHY DOES IT MATTER? ....................................................................................................................... 68

EXERCISES CHAPTER 15: THE HEALTH POLICY CONUNDRUM ............................................. 69

EXERCISES CHAPTER 16: THE BEVERIDGE MODEL ................................................................... 70

EXERCISES CHAPTER 17: THE BISMARCK MODEL ..................................................................... 71

EXERCISES CHAPTER 18: THE AMERICAN MODEL .................................................................... 72

EXERCISES CHAPTER 4: SOCIOECONOMIC DISPARITIES IN HEALTH ................................ 74

, 3


Chapter 15: The Health Policy Conundrum
Healthcare markets and healthcare insurance markets face several problems:
- Hospital markets can be vulnerable to oligopolies that can raise prices and make care
unaffordable.
o Perverse incentives exist (e.g., fee-for-service) that can motivate physicians to
provide wasteful care or to lobby hospitals to install ineffective medical devices.
- Healthcare insurance markets can malfunction due to asymmetric information or can
collapse when severe adverse selection occurs (leaving many uninsured)
o Moral hazard can make healthcare less efficient and more expensive.

è In this chapter, background is provided on the policies available to countries to organize
healthcare systems. Every policy entails a trade-off and – unfortunately – no perfect solutions
exist to the health policy conundrum.

Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem
According to Kenneth Arrow (1951), designing and organization of health systems is at heart
an optimization problem (e.g., like the task of individuals in the Grossman model).
- Societies must determine how much time/money to spend on improving health; and
how much time/money to spend on other national alternatives (e.g., education,
environment).
- Subsequently, an optimal strategy must be devised to achieve the desired level of health
in the cheapest and efficient manner.

Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem states that it does not make sense to determine an “optimal”
health policy for a country, because societies may not always have preferences that can be
optimized in the traditional sense.
- A society is fundamentally different from a single person, where a person is presumed
to have consistent and transitive preferences.
o Example of Transitive preferences: If an individual prefers eating a cookie (A)
to watching TV (B) and prefers watching TV (B) over exercising (C), then if
the individual has transitive preferences, they prefer a cookie (A) over
exercising (C).
§ In mathematical terms: For a relationship R on the set X è or all a, b,
c ∈ X, if a R b and b R c, then a R c.
As a nonmathematical example, the relation "is an ancestor of" is
transitive. For example, if Amy is an ancestor of Becky, and Becky is an
ancestor of Carrie, then Amy, too, is an ancestor of Carrie.
§ In case the individual prefers exercise (C) over a cookie (A), then they
have circular preferences, and the optimal activities cannot be
determined.
§ Without transitive preferences, welfare economics falls apart.

Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem exemplified (Table 15.1): Voter types are split 1/3. The logic
of transitive preferences
does not hold as though
individuals have transitive
preferences, sociality as a
whole has circular

, 4


preferences, and no optimum can be determined.

The Health Policy Trilemma
Health Policies can be analysed through measurement of three broad
goals: health, wealth, and equity è Goals allow not for determining a
national’s “optimal” policy, but to study trade-offs inherent in Health
Policy.

Health and Wealth are familiar from the Grossman model as an inherent
trade-off for individuals: health vs. other goods that can be purchased.
ð For societies, this trade-off must be considered between different
groups in society. Differences exist in willingness to sacrifice health or other goods to
achieve better outcomes for themselves or the worst-off.
Achieving Equity or “fairness” is the third goal, which relates to health access and outcomes.

Nations must determine which priorities within this trilemma they want to set, as in practice,
it is unattainable to have everything è Trade-offs are a necessary! For example:
- Any policy Z that combats adverse selection and increases Equity, would increase Costs
(lowering wealth) or lower health for some individuals.
- Countries may differ as to which trilemma goals they value more.
o E.g., valuing social equity through increasing taxes (Beveridge Model) vs.
placing a higher premium on health and approving moral hazard (American
Model)
o Variance in Health policies around the world is thus not necessarily an
indication for getting it right or wrong but reflects instead the nations different
constraints and preferences.
Health Policy optimization is made difficult through four pathologies in health care markets,
being 1) Adverse selection, 2) Monopolistic suppliers, 3) Moral Hazard and 4) Health
disparities.
- Solutions to these pathologies exist but lead to a new set of problems.

How should health insurance markets work?
A principal decision that shapes health care systems is how governments should address
uninsurance è requires a fundamental trade-off. Interventions are divided in 1) Completely
private insurance, 2) Universal public insurance, 3) Compulsory Insurance, 4) Employer-
sponsored Insurance and 5) Means-tested health insurance.

Complete private insurance is the basic version of the Rothschild-Stiglitz (R-S) model.
- Model predicts that only the frailest customers are insured fully and much of the population is
underinsured (separating equilibrium).
- The market can unravel under certain conditions, which can lead to uninsurance for the whole
population.
- Minimizes government involvement, results in maximal adverse selection and lowers equity.
è In practice, no country has completely privatized healthcare markets.
Universal public insurance provides coverage to the whole population and is administered by the
government (E.g., UK, Canada employs this system). System is characterized as single-payer
(Government pays for medical bills and provides population with healthcare insurance)
- Policy option sidesteps adverse selection, ends underinsurance and furthers the goal
of Equity.
o Public insurance can be complemented by private insurance.
$8.38
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached


Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
YannickKunnen Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
14
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
8
Documents
6
Last sold
5 months ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions