Publication | Closed Access
An Econometric Model of the Two-Part Decisionmaking Process in the Demand for Health Care
526
Citations
16
References
1995
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingClinical Decision-makingDecision AnalysisHealth Care FinanceMedical Decision MakingPrimary CareExperimental EconomicsPublic HealthTwo-part Decisionmaking ProcessChoice-process DataDecision TheoryStatisticsHealth Services ResearchQuantitative ManagementEconomicsHealth PolicyHealth InsuranceEconomic EvaluationMedical Decision AnalysisHurdle ModelHealth Care DeliveryBehavioral EconomicsSerious MisinterpretationEconometric ModelHealth EconomicsBusinessHealth Care CostDifferent DecisionmakersDecision Science
The decision to contact a physician and the decision about how often to contact a physician are determined by different decisionmakers. We introduce a negative binomial distributed hurdle model that specifies the two stages of the decisionmaking process as different stochastic processes, while at the same time taking care of the discrete nature of the data. Empirical results are based on a cross-section of the West German Socioeconomic Panel. Specification tests reveal that the two stages of the process need to be treated as two distinct processes. This, in turn, implies that ignoring this distinction leads to serious misinterpretation.
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