Publication | Closed Access
Price Subsidies, Diagnostic Tests, and Targeting of Malaria Treatment: Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial
180
Citations
45
References
2015
Year
Drug PolicyMalariaPreventive MedicineRandomized Controlled TrialPublic HealthSubsidy LevelHealth Services ResearchHigh SubsidyMalaria TreatmentHealth PolicyPharmacoeconomicsCost EffectivenessCost SharingPublic Health PolicyPrice SubsidiesEconomic EvaluationHealth EconomicsTreatment And PreventionGlobal HealthInternational HealthMedicineRapid Malaria
Both under- and over-treatment of communicable diseases are public bads. But efforts to decrease one run the risk of increasing the other. Using rich experimental data on household treatment-seeking behavior in Kenya, we study the implications of this trade-off for subsidizing life-saving antimalarials sold over-the-counter at retail drug outlets. We show that a very high subsidy (such as the one under consideration by the international community) dramatically increases access, but nearly one-half of subsidized pills go to patients without malaria. We study two ways to better target subsidized drugs: reducing the subsidy level, and introducing rapid malaria tests over-the-counter. (JEL D12, D82, I12, O12, O15)
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