Using Audit Studies to Test for Physician Induced Demand: The Case of Antibiotic Abuse in China
50 Pages Posted: 22 Jun 2012 Last revised: 6 Feb 2023
Date Written: June 2012
Abstract
The overuse of medical services including antibiotics is often blamed on Physician Induced Demand. But since this theory is about physician motivations, it is difficult to test. We conduct an audit study in which physician financial incentives, beliefs about what patients want, and desires to reciprocate for a small gift are systematically varied. We find that all of these treatments reduce antibiotics prescriptions, suggesting that antibiotics abuse in China is not driven by patients actively demanding antibiotics, by physicians believing that patients want antibiotics, or by physicians believing that antibiotics are in the best interests of their patients, but is largely driven by financial incentives. Our results also show that physician behavior can be significantly influenced by the receipt of a token gift, such as a pen.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Higher Prices from Entry: Pricing of Brand-Name Drugs
By Jeffrey M. Perloff, Valerie Y. Suslow, ...
-
By Ernst R. Berndt, Linda Tm Bui, ...
-
Consumption Externalities and Diffusion in Pharmaceutical Markets: Antiulcer Drugs
By Ernst R. Berndt, Robert S. Pindyck, ...
-
Generic Drug Industry Dynamics
By David Reiffen and Michael R. Ward
-
Hedonic Analysis of Arthritis Drugs
By Iain M. Cockburn and Aslam H. Anis
-
Longer Patents for Increased Generic Competition: The Waxman-Hatch Act after One Decade
By Henry G. Grabowski and John M. Vernon