School of Medicine, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 34, Hobart, TAS 7000, Australia.
Tasmanian School of Business and Economics, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 84, Hobart, TAS 7001, Australia.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Mar;176:77-84. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.01.020. Epub 2017 Jan 18.
Increasing attention has been paid in recent years to the problem of "too much medicine", whereby patients receive unnecessary investigations and treatments providing them with little or no benefit, but which expose them to risks of harm. Despite this phenomenon potentially constituting an inefficient use of health care resources, it has received limited direct attention from health economists. This paper considers "too much medicine" as a form of overconsumption, drawing on research from health economics, behavioural economics and ecological economics to identify possible explanations for and drivers of overconsumption. We define overconsumption of health care as a situation in which individuals consume in a way that undermines their own well-being. Extensive health economics research since the 1960s has provided clear evidence that physicians do not act as perfect agents for patients, and there are perverse incentives for them to provide unnecessary services under various circumstances. There is strong evidence of the existence of supplier-induced demand, and of the impact of various forms of financial incentives on clinical practice. The behavioural economics evidence provides rich insights on why clinical practice may depart from an "evidence-based" approach. Moreover, behavioural findings on health professionals' strategies for dealing with uncertainty, and for avoiding potential regret, provide powerful explanations of why overuse and overtreatment may frequently appear to be the "rational" choice in clinical decision-making, even when they cause harm. The ecological economics literature suggests that status or positional competition can, via the principal-agent relationship in health care, provide a further force driving overconsumption. This novel synthesis of economic perspectives suggests important scope for interdisciplinary collaboration; signals potentially important issues for health technology assessment and health technology management policies; and suggests that cultural change might be required to achieve significant shifts in clinical behaviour.
近年来,人们越来越关注“过度医疗”问题,即患者接受了不必要的检查和治疗,这些检查和治疗对他们几乎没有益处,但却使他们面临伤害的风险。尽管这种现象可能构成对医疗资源的低效利用,但它并没有得到健康经济学家的直接关注。本文将“过度医疗”视为一种过度消费的形式,借鉴健康经济学、行为经济学和生态经济学的研究成果,探讨过度消费的可能原因和驱动因素。我们将医疗保健的过度消费定义为个人以损害自身福祉的方式进行消费的情况。自 20 世纪 60 年代以来,广泛的健康经济学研究提供了明确的证据,表明医生并非患者的完美代理人,在各种情况下,他们都有提供不必要服务的不当激励。有强有力的证据表明存在供方诱导需求,以及各种形式的财务激励对临床实践的影响。行为经济学的证据为为什么临床实践可能偏离“基于证据”的方法提供了丰富的见解。此外,行为学研究发现,健康专业人员在处理不确定性和避免潜在遗憾方面的策略,为过度使用和过度治疗为何经常在临床决策中似乎成为“理性”选择提供了有力的解释,即使这些选择会造成伤害。生态经济学文献表明,地位或职位竞争可以通过医疗保健中的委托代理关系,进一步推动过度消费。这种对经济观点的新综合为跨学科合作提供了重要的空间;为卫生技术评估和卫生技术管理政策发出了潜在的重要问题信号;并表明文化变革可能是实现临床行为重大转变所必需的。