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1.
J Health Econ ; 84: 102625, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35561551

ABSTRACT

Many countries use uniform cost-effectiveness criteria to determine whether to adopt a new medical technology for the entire population. This approach assumes homogeneous preferences for expected health benefits and side effects. We examine whether new prescription drugs generate welfare gains when accounting for heterogeneous preferences by constructing quality-adjusted price indices in the market for colorectal cancer drug treatments. We find that while the efficacy gains from newer drugs do not justify high prices for the population as a whole, innovation improves the welfare of sicker, late-stage cancer patients. A uniform evaluation criterion would not permit these innovations despite welfare gains to a subpopulation.


Subject(s)
Prescription Drugs , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Drug Costs , Humans , Insurance Benefits
2.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 41(1): 129-137, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34982628

ABSTRACT

We tested the impact of personalized telephone calls from service center representatives on health plan enrollment in California's Affordable Care Act Marketplace, Covered California, using a randomized controlled trial. The study sample included 79,522 consumers who had applied but not selected a plan. Receiving a call increased enrollment by 2.7 percentage points (22.5 percent) overall. Among subgroups, receiving a call significantly increased enrollment among consumers with income below 200 percent of the federal poverty level (4.0 percentage points or 47.6 percent for consumers with incomes below 150 percent of poverty and 4.0 percentage points or 36.4 percent for consumers with incomes of 150-199 of poverty), as well as those who were referred from Medicaid (2.9 percentage points or 53.7 percent), those ages 30-50 (2.4 percentage points or 23.3 percent) or older than age 50 (5.1 percentage points or 34.2 percent), those who were Hispanic (2.3 percentage points or 31.1 percent), and those whose preferred spoken language was Spanish (3.2 percentage points or 74.4 percent) or English (2.6 percentage points or 18.6 percent). The intervention provided a two-to-one return on investment. Yet absolute enrollment in the target population remained low; persistent enrollment barriers may have limited the intervention's impact. These findings inform implementation of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, which expands eligibility for subsidized coverage.


Subject(s)
Insurance, Health , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act , Adult , Eligibility Determination , Humans , Insurance Coverage , Medicaid , Middle Aged , Telephone , United States
3.
J Health Polit Policy Law ; 36(5): 829-53, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21785011

ABSTRACT

The 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (P.L. 111-148), or ACA, requires that U.S. citizens either purchase health insurance or pay a fine. To offset the financial burden for lower-income households, it also provides subsidies to ensure that health insurance premiums are affordable. However, relatively little work has been done on how such affordability standards should be set. The existing literature on affordability is not grounded in social norms and has methodological and theoretical flaws. To address these issues, we developed a series of hypothetical vignettes in which individual and household sociodemographic characteristics were varied. We then convened a panel of eighteen experts with extensive experience in affordability standards to evaluate the extent to which each vignette character could afford to pay for one of two health insurance plans. The panel varied with respect to political ideology and discipline. We find that there was considerable disagreement about how affordability is defined. There was also disagreement about what might be included in an affordability standard, with substantive debate surrounding whether savings, debt, education, or single parenthood is relevant. There was also substantial variation in experts' assessed affordability scores. Nevertheless, median expert affordability assessments were not far from those of ACA.


Subject(s)
Insurance Coverage/economics , Insurance, Health/economics , Budgets , Delphi Technique , Financing, Personal , Health Behavior , Health Surveys , Humans , Medically Uninsured , Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act/economics , Public Policy , United States
4.
Annu Rev Public Health ; 31: 439-55, 2010.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20235853

ABSTRACT

Simulation modeling of health reform is a standard part of policy development and, in the United States, a required element in enacting health reform legislation. Modelers use three types of basic structures to build models of the health system: microsimulation, individual choice, and cell-based. These frameworks are filled in with data on baseline characteristics of the system and parameters describing individual behavior. Available data on baseline characteristics are imprecise, and estimates of key empirical parameters vary widely. A comparison of estimated and realized consequences of several health reform proposals suggests that models provided reasonably accurate estimates, with confidence bounds of approximately 30%.


Subject(s)
Health Care Reform , Health Policy , Models, Theoretical , Insurance, Health , United States
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