Connecting Health and Economics

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Transcription:

Connecting Health and Economics Hugh Gravelle Centre for Health Economics University of York CHE Seminar 7 April 2011

Outline Current state of health economics Contribution: models of decision making in health and healthcare Aid understanding Guide policy Challenges 2

How are we doing? Health economics papers in EconLit 1969-2009 2500 2000 1500 Health economics papers (ti,ab,kw,hw.) Health economics papers (ti) Total 1969-2009 31,363 10,592 1000 500 0 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999 2004 2009 Search terms: health, healthcare, medical, medicine, pharmaceutical, physician, doctor, nurse, nursing, hospital, general pract*, GP 3

How are we doing? Health economics papers in EconLit 1969-2009 % all papers 8.00% 7.00% 6.00% 5.00% 4.00% Health economics papers (ti,ab,kw,hw) Health economics papers (ti) 3.00% 2.00% 1.00% 0.00% 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999 2004 2009 Search terms: health, healthcare, medical, medicine, pharmaceutical, physician, doctor, nurse, nursing, hospital, general pract*, GP 4

How are we doing? Ratio of health to education papers: 1.1 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 EconLit 1969-2009 H Econ/Ed Econ (ti, ab, kw, hw) H Econ/Ed Econ (ti) 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999 2004 2009 Search terms: health, healthcare, medical, medicine, pharmaceutical, physician, doctor, nurse, nursing, hospital, general pract*, GP ; education, school*, human capital, teacher, pupil, student, college, university, class size, classroom 5

What are we doing? B WHAT IS HEALTH? WHAT IS ITS VALUE? A WHAT INFLUENCES HEALTH? (OTHER THAN HEALTH CARE) E MICROECONOMIC EVALUATION AT TREATMENT LEVEL C DEMAND FOR HEALTH CARE D SUPPLY OF HEALTH CARE F MARKET EQUILIBRIUM H PLANNING, BUDGETING, & MONITORING MECHANISMS G EVALUATION AT WHOLE SYSTEM LEVEL Williams, A. 1987. Health economics: the cheerful face of the dismal science? In Health and Economics, A. Williams, Macmillan, London 6

What are we doing? ECHE 2010 conference abstracts 30% 25% 20% n=593 15% 10% 5% 0% 7

Atlantic differences ECHE vs ASHE conference abstracts 30% 25% 20% 15% ECHE 2010 (n=593) ASHE 2010 (n=504) 10% 5% 0% 8

Economic analysis of health and health care If economists could manage to get themselves thought of as humble, competent people, on a level with dentists, that would be splendid! John Maynard Keynes (1931), Essays in Persuasion If politics is the art of the possible, research is surely the art of the soluble. Peter Medawar (1967), The Art of the Soluble Economics is the art of the modellable 9

Merits of formal modelling Expression of concepts in formal language promotes clarity Implicit assumptions easier to detect Derive all implications of explicit assumptions including the unexpected Promotes logical coherence Are assumptions compatible with each other Do conclusions follow from assumptions? Do same conclusions follow from other assumptions? 10

Reutersvärd - Penrose Tribar Feasible if modelled in 2 dimensions? Impossible if modelled as 3 dimensional object 11

Tribar statue: Perth Western Australia 12

Tribar statue: Perth Western Australia 13

Art of the modellable Economic models: building blocks Preferences Constraints Information Equilibrium concept Adjustment mechanism Explicit models required Logical testing Empirical testing Rich set of model building blocks Increasingly useful data sets 14

Health economics B WHAT IS HEALTH? WHAT IS ITS VALUE? A WHAT INFLUENCES HEALTH? (OTHER THAN HEALTH CARE) E MICROECONOMIC EVALUATION AT TREATMENT LEVEL C DEMAND FOR HEALTH CARE D SUPPLY OF HEALTH CARE F MARKET EQUILIBRIUM H PLANNING, BUDGETING, & MONITORING MECHANISMS G EVALUATION AT WHOLE SYSTEM LEVEL Williams, A. 1987. Health economics: the cheerful face of the dismal science? In Health and Economics, A. Williams, Macmillan, London 15

A. Determinants of health: epidemiological approach Epidemiology: estimate health production functions with exogenous inputs Ingenious use of natural experiments Snow s analysis of association between households water supply companies and cholera mortality to test for effect of water quality (Freedland, Statistical Models and Causal Inference, 2010 Limited recognition of endogeneity problems Doctor supply and population health (Cochrane et al, JECH 1978; Young, JECH 2001) Little use of IVs (Greenland, IJE 2000) 16

A. Determinants of health: contributions Economic approach: data generated by decisions - some inputs in health production function are endogenous Models of decisions affecting health Guide specification (explanatories, lags,... Highlight potential endogeneity problems Guide choice of IVs: Auster et al (JHR 1969); Rosenzweig & Schultz (JPE 1983) 17

A. Determinants of health: contributions Demand for health (Grossman, JPE 1972) Rational choice models of obesity Standard preferences (Lakwadalla & Philippson, AER 2005) : technological change induced decreased price of food, increased implicit price of exercise Behavioural preferences (Cutler et al, JEP 2003, NBER 2003): hyperbolic discounting: self control and commitment Genes, health and behaviour Genetic markers as IVs collaboration of economists and epidemiologists (EG von Hinke et al, CMPO 2009) 18

A. Determinants of health: challenges Effect of income on health IVs (eg local unemployment rates: Ettner, JHE 1996)? lottery wins (eg Lindahl, JHR 2005; Apouey & Clark, IZA 2010)? Negative income tax experiments? (Connor, JECH 1999) What are the health consequences of eg a 10% reduction in the state pension? Health and relative deprivation Little formal modelling Papers using population level data still published Mixed results from multi-level studies changes in absolute position imply changes in relative position Is the question soluble? 19

A. Determinants of health: challenges Population health and health care Many studies of effects of particular treatments Very few of effects of (i) doctor supply (ii) total health care expenditure on population health But geographical or cross sector funding decisions require information of effects of total health care expenditure on health What is the effect of increased NHS spending on the health of the population, of particular geographical or socio-economic population sub groups? 20

B. Measuring and valuing health: contributions Valuing health: numerical representation of preferences over dimensions of health Health utility measurement h = h(d 1,..., d n ) Specification of dimensions of health d 1,..., d n Health utility functions h(d 1,..., d n ) via decision models (TTO, SG) (Torrance et al, HSR 1972) Theoretical foundations of QALYs (Pliskin et al, OR 1980) Large number of applications 21

B. Measuring and valuing health: contributions Valuation of health: marginal rate of substitution between health and other goods u(y, h(d 1,..., d n )) Life satisfaction and CV, EV for health (eg Groot, HEc 2006) marginal value / y u u h h y 22

B. Measuring and valuing health: contributions Valuation of changes in risk V(y, ) = u 1 (y+e 1,h 1 ) + (1- )u 2 (y+e 2,h 2 ) Marginal value of risk / y V V y Theoretical foundations Dréze, 1962; Jones-Lee, 1976; Broome, Economica 1985; Johannsson, 1995 Estimates VoL by revealed & stated preference Thaler & Rosen (1977); Cropper et al, RFI 2011) 23

B. Measuring and valuing health: challenges Generic health utility measures insensitive to specific conditions eg cataracts and EQ5D? (Espallargues et al, Inv Opth Vis Sc 2005) Experience or decision utility (Dolan & Kahneman, EJ 2008) whose preferences? measured when? Wide ranges in estimates of monetary valuation of health Value of life near death (Philipson et al, NBER 2010) 24

C. Demand for health care: contributions Derived demand model Effect of insurance RAND Experiment (Newhouse et al, 1993) Many observational studies Welfare economics of insurance Ex post moral hazard (Pauly, AER 1968) Ex ante effects: income transfer between healthy and unhealthy states of the world (Nyman, JHE 1999) 25

C. Demand for health care: challenges Ex ante moral hazard Does health care insurance change illness probability via prevention? Does quality of health care affect demand? Crucial step in argument for fixed price quality competition 26

D. Supply of health care: contributions Provider altruism: McGuire, 2000; Koszegi, QJE 2006; Caplin et al, EJ 2004 Providers respond to financial incentives Hospitals and DRGs (Newhouse, 2002) SID (Gruber & Owens, RJE 1996) Property rights matter (Gaynor & Pauly, JPE 1990; Gaynor et al, JPE 2004) 27

D. Supply of health care: challenges Preferences of organisations Hospitals: aggregation from preferences of doctors, managers... Effect of ownership type on quality (Eggleston et al NBER 2006) Varieties of not for profit organisation Cost functions: effects of hospital size and scope on quality and cost 28

E: Economic evaluation: contributions Formalised role in regulatory bodies Opportunity costs matter, not just effectiveness Generally accepted set of modelling tools (Drummond et al 2005; Gold et al 1996) Decision trees, Markov models, sensitivity analysis... Value of information (Claxton, JHE 1999) 29

E. Economic evaluation: challenges Regulatory bodies equal discounting of costs and health effects healthcare sector not social perspective CEA rather than CBA More positive modelling Extract more information from RCTs (Chan & Hamilton, JPE 2006; Malani, JPE 2006) Extend external validity Improve estimates of opportunity costs: how do decision makers in health care sector respond to budget cuts? 30

F. Market equilibrium: contributions Rationing by waiting (Lindsay & Feigenbaum, AER 1984) Rational epidemics (Geoffard & Philipson, AER 1997; Boulier et al, BJEAP 2007) Information asymmetries can imply peculiar comparative statics (Pauly & Satterthwaite, Bell JE 1981) Effects of information (Dranove et al, JPE 2003) 31

F. Market equilibrium: challenges Few models of public sector decision making: positive political economy Crucial for policy re relative size and structure of public health care sector Variations across providers in LOS; costs; outcomes; admission thresholds... Persistent and mostly unexplained Due to unobserved characteristics of Patients? Providers? Markets structure? Market structure and outcomes Ambiguous theory predictions Limited evidence 32

G. System evaluation: contributions Social preferences for health Welfarism and extra welfarism (Culyer, OxREcPol 1989) Inequity measurement Wagstaff et al, SSM 1991; Kakwani et al, JEcts 1997; Jones & Lopez-Nicolas, HEc 2004 Welfare foundations of inequity measures Wagstaff, JHE 2002; Bleichrodt & van Doorslaer, JHE 2006; Fleurbaey & Schokkaert, JHE 2009 33

G. System evaluation: challenges Inequality measures Require positive models of health, health care to interpret underlying correlations of health, income Multivariate inequality? Why not welfare functions? Efficiency measurement No theoretical foundation in models of decisions (Leibenstein, AER 1966, Stigler, AER 1976) Data envelopment analysis Stochastic frontier estimation - Newhouse (JHE 1994) 34

H. Planning, budgeting, monitoring: contributions Risk rating/formula funding (Carr-Hill et al, 1994; Ellis et al HCFinRev 2004; Schokkaert, HEc 1998) DRG pricing (Newhouse, 2002) Effects of targets and regulations (Propper et al, BJEAP 2008) First law of policy evaluation: in complex systems with asymmetrical information all policies have unintended consequences Fundholding; QOF; NHS wage regulation.. 35

H. Planning, budgeting, monitoring: challenges Is more information for patients welfare increasing? Does P4P crowd out intrinsic motivation? Does provider or insurer competition increase welfare? Should providers be split from purchasers? Is free entry of providers welfare increasing (Mankiew & Whinston, RJE 1986)? Do for profit firms perform better? Rewards for innovation Incentive mechanisms (patents, licensing, tendering, competitions ) affect both innovation and use 36

Future prospects for health economics Rich economics model building toolbox Improving data Cohort studies Linked administrative data Increasing policy demand for solutions to important problems EG: Implications of population aging, obesity and related policies Combine methods from health economics sub disciplines (economic evaluation, positive modelling of behaviour of patients & providers) 37

Go forth and model 38