We study a policy aimed at increasing the level of information on medical malpractice costs and the risk exposure of local public healthcare providers. The policy is based on enhanced monitoring of medical malpractice claims by the level of government that rules providers in a multilevel institutional setting. In particular, we implement a difference-in-differences strategy using Italian data at the provider level from 2001 to 2008 to evaluate the impact of monitoring claims on medical liability expenditures, measured as insurance premiums and legal expenditures, which was adopted by only some Regions. Our results show that this information-enhancing policy reduces paid premiums by around 15%. This reduced-form effect might arise by higher bargaining power on the demand side or increased competition on the supply side of the insurance market. Validity tests show that our findings are not driven by differential pre-policy trends between treated and control providers. Moreover, this policy could be cheaply implemented also in other institutional contexts with positive effects.

Curb your premium : The impact of monitoring malpractice claims / S. Amaral-Garcia, V. Grembi. - In: HEALTH POLICY. - ISSN 0168-8510. - 114:2-3(2014 Feb), pp. 139-146. [10.1016/j.healthpol.2013.08.007]

Curb your premium : The impact of monitoring malpractice claims

V. Grembi
Ultimo
2014

Abstract

We study a policy aimed at increasing the level of information on medical malpractice costs and the risk exposure of local public healthcare providers. The policy is based on enhanced monitoring of medical malpractice claims by the level of government that rules providers in a multilevel institutional setting. In particular, we implement a difference-in-differences strategy using Italian data at the provider level from 2001 to 2008 to evaluate the impact of monitoring claims on medical liability expenditures, measured as insurance premiums and legal expenditures, which was adopted by only some Regions. Our results show that this information-enhancing policy reduces paid premiums by around 15%. This reduced-form effect might arise by higher bargaining power on the demand side or increased competition on the supply side of the insurance market. Validity tests show that our findings are not driven by differential pre-policy trends between treated and control providers. Moreover, this policy could be cheaply implemented also in other institutional contexts with positive effects.
difference in differences; legal expenditures; medical malpractice premium; monitoring claims; fees and charges; humans; insurance, liability; Italy; liability, legal; malpractice; organizational policy; policy making; public policy; compensation and redress; medicine (all
Settore SECS-P/01 - Economia Politica
Settore SECS-P/03 - Scienza delle Finanze
feb-2014
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/545328
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