Book contents
- Behavioural Incentive Design for Health Policy
- Behavioural Incentive Design for Health Policy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Glossary
- 1 Behavioural Incentives and Health
- 2 Behavioural Learning and the Design of Incentives
- 3 Monetary Incentives for Health
- 4 Social Incentives for Health Behaviours
- 5 Nudging for Better Health
- 6 Social Preferences and Health
- 7 Behavioural Incentives for Health Behaviours
- 8 Behavioural Anomalies in the Demand for Health Care
- 9 Behavioural Anomalies in the Healthcare Supply
- 10 Behavioural Health Insurance Uptake
- 11 Ageing and Caregiving Decisions Over Time
- 12 Policy Applications from a Global Perspective
- References
- Index
9 - Behavioural Anomalies in the Healthcare Supply
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 May 2023
- Behavioural Incentive Design for Health Policy
- Behavioural Incentive Design for Health Policy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Glossary
- 1 Behavioural Incentives and Health
- 2 Behavioural Learning and the Design of Incentives
- 3 Monetary Incentives for Health
- 4 Social Incentives for Health Behaviours
- 5 Nudging for Better Health
- 6 Social Preferences and Health
- 7 Behavioural Incentives for Health Behaviours
- 8 Behavioural Anomalies in the Demand for Health Care
- 9 Behavioural Anomalies in the Healthcare Supply
- 10 Behavioural Health Insurance Uptake
- 11 Ageing and Caregiving Decisions Over Time
- 12 Policy Applications from a Global Perspective
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter examines the role of behavioural incentives as influencing healthcare delivery. It describes decision-making in clinical contexts and the roles of biases that naturally occur in these settings. Sometimes these have negative impacts (e.g., medical errors) and other times positive impacts (e.g., role of social norms for positive change). Pay for performance (P4P) programmes are discussed in this context. This chapter also includes examples of interventions such as defaults in the electronic health record and how antibiotic prescribing programmes that use social norms can be important to change behaviours. However, they need to be applied carefully and in concert with clinical collaboration.
Keywords
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- Information
- Behavioural Incentive Design for Health PolicySteering for Health, pp. 125 - 138Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023