Predicting medical practices using various ...
Document type :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
Title :
Predicting medical practices using various risk attitude measures
Author(s) :
Massin, Sophie [Auteur]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Nebout, Antoine [Auteur]
Alimentation et sciences sociales [ALISS]
Ventelou, Bruno [Auteur]
Aix-Marseille Sciences Economiques [AMSE]
Lille économie management - UMR 9221 [LEM]
Nebout, Antoine [Auteur]
Alimentation et sciences sociales [ALISS]
Ventelou, Bruno [Auteur]
Aix-Marseille Sciences Economiques [AMSE]
Journal title :
European Journal of Health Economics
Pages :
843–860
Publisher :
Springer Verlag
Publication date :
2018
ISSN :
1618-7598
English keyword(s) :
Lottery choice
Medical practices
Risk attitude
Scale
Domain specificity JEL Classification C93
D81
I10
Medical practices
Risk attitude
Scale
Domain specificity JEL Classification C93
D81
I10
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Economies et finances
English abstract : [en]
This paper investigates the predictive power of several risk attitude measures on a series of medical practices. We elicit risk preferences on a sample of 1500 French general practitioners (GPs) using two different classes ...
Show more >This paper investigates the predictive power of several risk attitude measures on a series of medical practices. We elicit risk preferences on a sample of 1500 French general practitioners (GPs) using two different classes of tools: scales, which measure GPs' own perception of their willingness to take risks between 0 and 10; and lotteries, which require GPs to choose between a safe and a risky option in a series of hypothetical situations. In addition to a daily life risk scale that measures a general risk attitude, risk taking is measured in different domains for each tool: financial matters, GPs' own health, and patients' health. We take advantage of the rare opportunity to combine these multiple risk attitude measures with a series of self-reported or administratively recorded medical practices. We successively test the predictive power of our seven risk attitude measures on eleven medical practices affecting the GPs' own health or their patients' health. We find that domain-specific measures are far better predictors than the general risk attitude measure. Neither of the two classes of tools (scales or lotteries) seems to perform indisputably better than the other, except when we concentrate on the only non-declarative practice (prescription of biological tests), for which the classic money-lottery test works well. From a public health perspective, appropriate measures of willingness to take risks may be used to make a quick, but efficient, profiling of GPs and target them with personalized communications, or interventions, aimed at improving practices.Show less >
Show more >This paper investigates the predictive power of several risk attitude measures on a series of medical practices. We elicit risk preferences on a sample of 1500 French general practitioners (GPs) using two different classes of tools: scales, which measure GPs' own perception of their willingness to take risks between 0 and 10; and lotteries, which require GPs to choose between a safe and a risky option in a series of hypothetical situations. In addition to a daily life risk scale that measures a general risk attitude, risk taking is measured in different domains for each tool: financial matters, GPs' own health, and patients' health. We take advantage of the rare opportunity to combine these multiple risk attitude measures with a series of self-reported or administratively recorded medical practices. We successively test the predictive power of our seven risk attitude measures on eleven medical practices affecting the GPs' own health or their patients' health. We find that domain-specific measures are far better predictors than the general risk attitude measure. Neither of the two classes of tools (scales or lotteries) seems to perform indisputably better than the other, except when we concentrate on the only non-declarative practice (prescription of biological tests), for which the classic money-lottery test works well. From a public health perspective, appropriate measures of willingness to take risks may be used to make a quick, but efficient, profiling of GPs and target them with personalized communications, or interventions, aimed at improving practices.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Popular science :
Non
ANR Project :
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