Working Paper: NBER ID: w19622
Authors: Brian K. Chen; Paul J. Gertler; Chuhyuh Yang
Abstract: When physicians own complementary medical service facilities such as clinical laboratories and imaging centers, they gain financially by referring patients to these service entities. This situation creates an incentive for the physician to exploit the consumers' trust by recommending more services than they would demand under full information. This moral hazard cost, however, may be offset by gains in economies of scope if the complementary services are integrated into the physician's practice. We assess the extent of moral hazard and economies of scope using data from Taiwan, which introduced a "separating" policy, similar to the Stark Law in the US, that restricts physician ownership of pharmacies unless they are fully integrated into the physician's practice. We find that physicians who own pharmacies prescribe 7.6% more drugs than those who do not own pharmacies. Overall, we find no evidence of economies of scope from integration in the treatment of patients with acute respiratory infections, diabetes, or hypertension. Overall the separating policy was ineffective at controlling drug costs as a large number of physicians choose to integrate pharmacies into their practices in order to become exempt from the policy.
Keywords: moral hazard; economies of scope; physician ownership; healthcare policy; Taiwan
JEL Codes: I11; I12; K23; L22
Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.
Cause | Effect |
---|---|
separating policy (R28) | drug expenditures (H51) |
owning a pharmacy (L65) | physician drug prescriptions (I11) |
integration of pharmacies (L81) | therapy adherence (I12) |
integration of pharmacies (L81) | adverse medical events (I10) |