Is Medical Care Different? Old Questions, New Answers
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- Published by Duke University Press in Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
- Vol. 13 (2) , 227-237
- https://doi.org/10.1215/03616878-13-2-227
Abstract
This paper examines whether changes in medical markets may be making them more like other markets. The emergence of HMOs and other managed care systems appears to have increased the consumer's potential ability to make better comparative judgments about the price and quality of medical care, and also seems to have made medical care more like other goods. However, the evidence that medical care is a “reputation good” suggests that it is, in this respect, different from other goods. Finally, the social concerns about medical care use necessarily make medical care different.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hospital Inpatient MortalityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Physician-induced demand for surgeryJournal of Health Economics, 1986
- Regulatory Measures to Enforce Quality Production of Self-Employed Professionals — a Theoretical Study of a Dynamic Market ProcessPublished by Springer Nature ,1986
- Learning to Say “No”New England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- Competition and efficiency in the end stage renal disease programJournal of Health Economics, 1983
- The Pricing of Primary Care Physicians Services: A Test of the Role of Consumer InformationThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1981
- The Role of Nonprofit EnterpriseThe Yale Law Journal, 1980
- The Effects of Competition and Regulation on Hospital Bed Supply and the Reservation Quality of the HospitalThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1980
- Medical Care and the Economics of SharingEconomica, 1969