Pharmacotherapy Outcomes Research Center, College of Pharmacy, University of Utah, 30 S 2000 E, Salt Lake City, 84112, UT, USA; Population Informatics Lab, Texas A&M University, 212 Adriance Lab Rd, College Station, 77843, TX, USA; Laboratory of Health Economics & Management, Economics Department, University of Piraeus, Karaoli ke Dimitriou 80, 185 34, Piraeus, Greece.
Department of Health Policy & Management, School of Public Health, Texas A&M University, 212 Adriance Lab Rd, 77843, College Station, TX, USA.
Health Policy. 2021 Jun;125(6):693-700. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2021.04.001. Epub 2021 Apr 3.
Informal out-of-pocket payments to healthcare providers are not uncommon in the Greek health system. We explore individuals' willingness-to-pay (WTP) to secure zero out-of-pocket full coverage for healthcare services and medications and we estimate the impact of past informal payments and individuals' opinion about the legalization of informal payments on WTP.
We conducted a survey of 2841 participants from November 2016 to February 2017. We obtained information on WTP using the contingent valuation method. A two-part regression model was used to estimate the association between WTP, informal payments, and respondents' opinion about legalizing such payments.
About 80% of the respondents were willing to pay an average of €95 per month to obtain free access to full healthcare coverage and medications. About 65% of the respondents were involved in an informal payment at least once during the past four months with an average payment of €247. Higher informal payments and supportive opinions towards the legalization of informal payments increased the likelihood of WTP and were also positively associated with increased WTP amounts overall (p < 0.001).
This survey reveals that individuals' WTP is critically affected by previous experiences and attitudes towards informal payments. Our results imply that the potential introduction of official fees might not suffice to limit informal payments and suggest the need for stricter regulatory policies.
在希腊医疗体系中,向医疗服务提供者支付非正式的自付费用并不罕见。我们探讨了个人为获得医疗服务和药物的零自付全额覆盖而愿意支付的费用(WTP),并估计了过去非正式支付的影响以及个人对非正式支付合法化的看法对 WTP 的影响。
我们于 2016 年 11 月至 2017 年 2 月对 2841 名参与者进行了调查。我们使用条件价值评估法获取关于 WTP 的信息。使用两部分回归模型来估计 WTP、非正式支付以及受访者对合法化此类支付的看法之间的关联。
约 80%的受访者愿意每月支付 95 欧元以获得免费的全面医疗保健覆盖和药物。约 65%的受访者在过去四个月内至少有一次非正式支付,平均支付 247 欧元。较高的非正式支付和对非正式支付合法化的支持性意见增加了 WTP 的可能性,并且总体上也与 WTP 金额的增加呈正相关(p<0.001)。
这项调查表明,个人的 WTP 受到先前经验和对非正式支付的态度的严重影响。我们的结果表明,引入官方收费可能不足以限制非正式支付,并表明需要更严格的监管政策。