Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, St. Luke's International Hospital, Tokyo, Japan; Department of Epidemiology, St. Luke's International University Graduate School of Public Health, Tokyo, Japan.
Keio University, Graduate School of Business Administration, Tokyo, Japan.
Soc Sci Med. 2019 Aug;235:112390. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112390. Epub 2019 Jul 9.
Evidence is limited and mixed as to how improved price transparency affects patients' demand for healthcare. Price transparency usually affects both the supply and the demand side of healthcare. However, in Japan-where healthcare providers cannot compete on prices-we can examine an independent impact of price transparency on patients' demand for healthcare. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of improved price transparency on patients' demand for healthcare. We conducted an experiment by presenting patients with the "price list" of individual healthcare services. We provided the price list for a limited time and compared the healthcare spending and utilization of care between these patients who were provided the price list (patients who visited between the first and third week of January in 2016) versus those who were not (patients who visited during the same period in 2015 or 2017), adjusting for potential confounders. A total of 1053 patients were analyzed (27.5% were provided the price list). We found that improved price transparency was associated with a higher total cost per patient (adjusted difference, +16.1%; 95%CI, +0.6% to +34.0%; p = 0.04). We also found that improved price transparency was associated with higher costs related to laboratory tests and imaging studies, and a larger total number of items of blood tests and urine tests. By conducting an experiment in a real-world setting, we found that improved price transparency paradoxically increased the utilization of healthcare services in Japan. These findings suggest that when prices are relatively low, as is the case in Japan, reduced uncertainty about the prices of healthcare service may make patients comfortable requesting more healthcare services.
提高价格透明度如何影响患者对医疗保健的需求的证据有限且混杂。价格透明度通常会同时影响医疗保健的供应方和需求方。然而,在日本,医疗服务提供者不能在价格上竞争,我们可以研究价格透明度对患者对医疗保健的需求的独立影响。本研究旨在调查提高价格透明度对患者对医疗保健的需求的影响。我们通过向患者展示个别医疗服务的“价格清单”来进行实验。我们提供了价格清单的有限时间,并比较了这些患者(在 2016 年 1 月第一周到第三周就诊的患者)与未提供价格清单的患者(在 2015 年或 2017 年同期就诊的患者)之间的医疗保健支出和利用情况,同时调整了潜在的混杂因素。共分析了 1053 名患者(27.5%的患者提供了价格清单)。我们发现,提高价格透明度与每位患者的总费用增加有关(调整后的差异,+16.1%;95%CI,+0.6%至+34.0%;p=0.04)。我们还发现,提高价格透明度与实验室检查和影像学研究相关的成本增加以及血液检查和尿液检查的总项目数量增加有关。通过在真实环境中进行实验,我们发现提高价格透明度反而增加了日本医疗保健服务的利用。这些发现表明,当价格相对较低时,如日本的情况,减少对医疗服务价格的不确定性可能会使患者更愿意要求更多的医疗服务。