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HIM0002 (APT 2) Complete summary of literature

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APT 2 Complete summary of literature

Analyse the Economic Context of Health(care) Innovation

HIM0002

,Learning community meeting 1: Determinants of
demand for health services and products
Introduction to Health Economics
by Guinness & Wiseman, based on the structure and contents.
Chapter 1 – Key Concepts in Health Economics

This chapter lays the foundation for understanding how economics applies to health care:

 Scarcity & Opportunity Cost: Health systems have limited resources (staff, beds,
drugs). Choosing one allocation (e.g., more ICU beds) means sacrificing another (e.g.,
preventive programs). Opportunity cost is central in every health policy decision.

 Efficiency vs. Equity: Efficiency is about maximizing outcomes with available resources
(getting the “best value for money”). Equity is about fairness in distribution of resources
and access to services. These often trade off: for example, reaching rural populations
may be less efficient but improves equity.

 Utility & Preferences: People derive “utility” (satisfaction) from health and care
services. Health economics examines how these preferences shape demand and policy
priorities.

 Market Failures: Unlike standard markets, health care faces failures—information
asymmetry (patients rely on doctors’ expertise), externalities (vaccination benefits
others), uncertainty, and moral hazard (insurance reduces incentives to avoid risk).

 Role of Government: Because of these failures, governments step in to regulate,
finance, or directly provide health care.

Takeaway: Health economics is not just about costs—it’s about making tough choices under
scarcity, balancing efficiency with fairness, and addressing unique features of health care
markets.



Chapter 3 (pp. 37–46, 49) – A Simple Model of Demand

This section explains how demand theory applies to health care, with key points:

 Individual Choice Framework: People make health care decisions based on
preferences, income, and prices. Demand curves represent the relationship between
price and quantity demanded.

 Determinants of Demand:

o Price of health services – higher prices reduce demand (but often less strongly
than other goods).

, o Income – as income rises, demand for health care may increase, especially for
higher-quality care.

o Preferences & attitudes – culture, education, and health beliefs strongly shape
demand.

o Substitutes & complements – e.g., over-the-counter medicine as a substitute
for GP visits; health insurance as a complement.

 Elasticity of Demand:

o Price elasticity – measures how sensitive demand is to price changes. Health
care demand is often inelastic (people still seek care even if cost rises),
especially in emergencies.

o Income elasticity – for basic health services, elasticity may be low (necessary
goods), but for premium services, elasticity is higher.

 Health Care Peculiarities: Unlike normal goods, demand is influenced by doctors’
decisions, insurance coverage, and uncertainty. Patients rarely know what care they
need, so demand depends on provider guidance.

 Moral Hazard: With insurance, patients may consume more services than necessary
since they don’t bear the full cost.

Takeaway: Demand for health care doesn’t follow classic market patterns. Elasticities are lower,
preferences are shaped by culture and knowledge, and provider influence is huge.



Chapter 4 (pp. 55–60) – Measuring Demand

This section builds on demand theory by focusing on how to quantify demand in practice:

 Elasticities in Action:

o Price elasticity: Empirical studies often show values between –0.1 and –0.4 for
health care (meaning a 10% rise in price reduces demand by only 1–4%).
Preventive care tends to be more price-sensitive than urgent care.

o Income elasticity: Often positive but <1, meaning health care is a “necessity”
rather than a luxury. Richer people spend more, but proportionally less as
income rises.

 Cross-Price Elasticity: Examines substitution/complementary effects. For example, if
GP consultation costs rise, patients may substitute with ER visits or alternative
medicine.

 Applications:

o Estimating demand elasticities helps policymakers predict effects of fee
changes, co-payments, or insurance expansions.

, o Example: Introducing small co-payments may reduce unnecessary GP visits but
risks reducing needed visits too.

 Limitations:

o Health care demand is often estimated indirectly because patients don’t make
pure price–quantity choices. Insurance, gatekeeping systems, and provider-
driven care complicate measurement.

o Studies must carefully distinguish between revealed demand (observed
behavior) and true need.

Takeaway: Measuring demand requires tools like elasticity, but because of health care’s unique
features, interpreting these numbers for policy is complex and context-specific.
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