Does Economic Incentive Matter for Rational Use of Medicine? China’s Experience from the Essential Medicines Program
It seems that the removal of a perverse economic incentive alone would not lead to improvement of healthcare providers’ prescribing patterns. The rationality of the Essential Medicines List and the lack of payers’ and providers’ meaningful involvement in the development of the policy possibly contribute to the lack of significant changes in prescribing behaviors. It is suggested that China should adopt more comprehensive policies for healthcare facilities, physicians, patients, and payers, rather than just relying on economic incentives to improve rational use of medicines. </AbstractSection> Copyright Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2014
Year of publication: |
2014
|
---|---|
Authors: | Chen, Mingsheng ; Wang, Lijie ; Chen, Wen ; Zhang, Luying ; Jiang, Hongli ; Mao, Wenhui |
Published in: |
PharmacoEconomics. - Springer, ISSN 1170-7690. - Vol. 32.2014, 3, p. 245-255
|
Publisher: |
Springer |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Are services delivered by community health centers more cost‐effective? Evidence from urban China
Jiang, Hongli, (2009)
-
Are services delivered by community health centers more cost-effective? : evidence from urban China
Jiang, Hongli, (2009)
-
Can a global budget improve health care efficiency? : experimental evidence from China
Zhang, Hao, (2022)
- More ...