Technology Adoption and Market Allocation:The Case of Robotic Surgery

43 Pages Posted: 27 Sep 2021 Last revised: 23 Jan 2025

See all articles by Danea Horn

Danea Horn

University of California, Davis

Adam Sacarny

Columbia University

R. Annetta Zhou

RAND Corporation

Date Written: September 2021

Abstract

The adoption of healthcare technology is central to improving productivity in this sector. To provide new evidence on how technology affects healthcare markets, we focus on one area where adoption has been particularly rapid: surgery for prostate cancer. Over just six years, robotic surgery grew to become the dominant intensive prostate cancer treatment method. Using a difference-in-differences design, we show that adopting a robot drives prostate cancer patients to the hospital. To test whether this result reflects market expansion or business stealing, we also consider market-level effects of adoption and find they are significant but smaller, suggesting that adoption expands the market while also reallocating some patients across hospitals. Marginal patients are relatively young and healthy, inconsistent with the concern that adoption broadens the criteria for intervention to patients who would gain little from it. We conclude by discussing implications for the social value of technology diffusion in healthcare markets.

Suggested Citation

Horn, Danea and Sacarny, Adam and Zhou, R. Annetta, Technology Adoption and Market Allocation:The Case of Robotic Surgery (September 2021). NBER Working Paper No. w29301, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3931825

Danea Horn (Contact Author)

University of California, Davis ( email )

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Adam Sacarny

Columbia University

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New York, NY 10027
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R. Annetta Zhou

RAND Corporation

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Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138
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