Takaku Reo, Bessho S
Institute for Health Economics and Policy, No.11 Toyo Kaiji Bldg. 2F, 1-5-11 Nishishimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-0003, Japan.
Faculty of Economics, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan.
Health Policy. 2017 May;121(5):534-542. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2017.02.016. Epub 2017 Mar 12.
Although the payment systems of public health insurance vary greatly across countries, we still have limited knowledge of their effects. To quantify the changes from a benefits in kind system to a refund system, we exploit the largest physician strike in Japan since the Second World War. During the strike in 1971 led by the Japan Medical Association (JMA), JMA physicians resigned as health insurance doctors, but continued to provide medical care and even health insurance treatment in some areas. This study uses the regional differences in resignation rates as a natural experiment to examine the effect of the payment method of health insurance on medical service utilization and health outcomes. In the main analysis, aggregated monthly prefectural data are used (N=46). Our estimation results indicate that if the participation rate of the strike had increased by 1% point and proxy claims were refused completely, the number of cases of insurance benefits and the total amount of insurance benefits would have decreased by 0.78% and 0.58%, respectively compared with the same month in the previous year. Moreover, the average amount of insurance benefits per claim increased since patients with relatively less serious diseases might have sought health care less often. Finally, our results suggest that the mass of resignations did not affect death rates.
尽管各国公共医疗保险的支付系统差异很大,但我们对其影响的了解仍然有限。为了量化从实物福利制度到报销制度的变化,我们利用了二战以来日本最大规模的医生罢工。在1971年由日本医学协会(JMA)领导的罢工期间,JMA的医生辞去了医疗保险医生的职务,但继续提供医疗服务,甚至在一些地区提供医疗保险治疗。本研究利用辞职率的地区差异作为自然实验,来检验医疗保险支付方式对医疗服务利用和健康结果的影响。在主要分析中,使用了县级每月汇总数据(N = 46)。我们的估计结果表明,如果罢工参与率提高1个百分点且代理索赔被完全拒绝,与上一年同月相比,保险福利案件数量和保险福利总额将分别下降0.78%和0.58%。此外,由于病情相对较轻的患者可能减少了就医频率,每次索赔的平均保险福利金额有所增加。最后,我们的结果表明大规模辞职并未影响死亡率。