Physician behavior: Experimental evidence from physician and patient perspectives

Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics Volume 112 Page 102255- published_at 2024-06-19
アクセス数 : 5
ダウンロード数 : 0

今月のアクセス数 : 0
今月のダウンロード数 : 0
File
available 2027-06-19 602 KB 種類 : fulltext エンバーゴ : 2027-06-19
Title ( eng )
Physician behavior: Experimental evidence from physician and patient perspectives
Creator
Dzampe Adolf Kwadzo
Source Title
Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
Volume 112
Start Page 102255
Abstract
Physician motives remain a hotly debated and sensitive topic. Given the sensitive nature of this issue, direct questions may elicit either dishonest responses or no response at all. To mitigate this risk, we carried out two list experiments between November 2022 and February 2023 to examine two important physician behaviors from both the physician and patient perspectives. In these experiments, participants in the control and treatment groups were shown a list of non-sensitive statements. Additionally, each treatment group received a sensitive statement related to either demand inducement or demand enablement behavior. Participants were then asked to report only the number of statements with which they agreed. The difference in the mean number of statements agreed upon between the control and treatment groups revealed the prevalence rates of sensitive behaviors. In the physician experiment, we observed a 25 % prevalence rate (standard error (SE) = 0.127, p = 0.046) for demand inducement behavior and a 65 % rate (SE = 0.125, p < 0.001) for demand enablement behavior. In the patient experiment, compared to the control group, 52 % of participants (SE = 0.074, p < 0.001) perceived that physicians exhibit demand inducement behavior, while 39 % (SE = 0.073, p < 0.001) demonstrated behavior consistent with demand enablement. These findings indicate that physicians are more prone to offer unnecessary medical services when patients actively participate, underscoring the significant influence of patients on physician behavior.
Keywords
Physician behavior
Demand inducement
Demand enablement
Patient perspective
List experiment
Ghana
Language
eng
Resource Type journal article
Publisher
Elsevier
Date of Issued 2024-06-19
Rights
© 2024. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
This is not the published version. Please cite only the published version.
この論文は出版社版ではありません。引用の際には出版社版をご確認、ご利用ください。
Publish Type Accepted Manuscript
Access Rights embargoed access
Source Identifier
[DOI] https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2024.102255 isVersionOf
Remark The full-text file will be made open to the public on 19 June 2027 in accordance with publisher's 'Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving'