González Paula
Dpto. Economía y Empresa, Universidad Pablo de Olavide and centrA, Sevilla, Spain.
Health Econ. 2005 May;14(5):513-27. doi: 10.1002/hec.946.
We consider an economy where public hospitals are capacity-constrained, and we analyse the willingness of health authorities to reach agreements with private hospitals to have some of their patients treated there. When physicians are dual suppliers, we show that a problem of cream-skimming arises and reduces the incentives of the health authority to undertake such a policy. We argue that the more dispersed are the severities of the patients, the greater the reduction in the incentives will be. We also show that, despite the patient selection problem, when the policy is implemented it is often the case that health authorities decide a more intensive transfer of patients to private practice.
我们考虑这样一种经济情形,即公立医院存在产能限制,并且我们分析卫生当局与私立医院达成协议以便让部分患者在私立医院接受治疗的意愿。当医生是双重供应商时,我们表明会出现撇脂问题,这会降低卫生当局实施此类政策的积极性。我们认为患者病情严重程度分布越分散,积极性的降低幅度就越大。我们还表明,尽管存在患者选择问题,但当实施该政策时,卫生当局通常会决定将患者更密集地转移到私立医疗机构。