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Defensive medicine and its contributing factors of public hospitals in China:Research findings from a physician survey in a city of Guangdong province / 中国卫生政策研究
Chinese Journal of Health Policy ; (12): 33-39, 2014.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-459855
ABSTRACT
The rapid cost escalation and vast supplier-induced demands in the Chinese health care system are well-known to the health policy research community. The existing literature tends to explain the pervasive overprovision of care by financial incentives of hospitals and physicians. Behind this is a series of misaligned perverse incentives embedded in the Chinese health system for decades. With a survey of public hospital physicians in a city of Guangdong, this study re-veals that the overprovision of care, especially overprescription, is not solely driven by economic incentives, but also by physicians’ motive of avoiding potential disputes with patients, reflecting defensive medical behaviors. The survey was con-ducted in December 2013, which selected 504 licensed physicians by random sampling. The regression analysis suggests that low income and the perceived imbalance between efforts and rewards indeed contribute to physiciansmotivation of de-fensive medicine. In the meantime, their past experiences of medical disputes with patients are also found significantly as-sociated with defensive behaviors. This study has revealed the critical impacts of the escalating tension between doctors and patients in distorting physicianbehaviors, and lays out policy recommendations.

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Type of study: Diagnostic study Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Health Policy Year: 2014 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Type of study: Diagnostic study Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Health Policy Year: 2014 Type: Article