Endogenous switching of insurance regime and the demand for health care services among the insured and uninsured
References
119 citations
"Endogenous switching of insurance r..." refers background in this paper
...Schellhorn (2001) finds that residing in the city increases the demand for specialist visits and both Vera-Hernandez (1999) and Schellhorn (2001) find that the higher educated individuals demand more specialist visits....
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...(Terza 1998:129, McGeary and French 2000: 153, Kenkel and Terza (2001: 165) 8 Examples of GMM estimation of an endogenous treatment effect model appear in Vera-Hernandez (1999) and Schellhorn (2001)....
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...Vera-Hernandez (1999) analyzes the implications of duplicate coverage on demand for visits to specialist, and Schellhorn (2001) studies the effect of the choice of deductibles in the mandatory basic health insurance in Switzerland on physician service utilization....
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...(Vera-Hernandez 1999: 579, Schellhorn 2001: 441) Tüm hakları BEYDER'e aittir neither allows for the complete interaction between insurance and the determinants of utilization....
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...Schellhorn (2001) reports that income does not have a significant effect on both specialist and primary physician visits, (Schellhorn 2001: 441) whereas Vera-Hernandez (1999) finds that income significantly increases the demand for specialist visits....
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92 citations
"Endogenous switching of insurance r..." refers background in this paper
...As Coulson et al. (1995) and Terza (1998) point out, this correlation not only allows one to test the endogeneity of insurance, it also provides evidence as to the type of selection....
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82 citations
"Endogenous switching of insurance r..." refers methods in this paper
...The endogenous treatment effect version of his general formulation has been used in various applied studies to analyze the effect of endogenous vehicle ownership on trip frequency, (Terza 1998: 129) the impact of chronic illicit drug use on emergency room utilization (McGeary and French 2000: 153), and the effect of physician advice on alcohol consumption (Kenkel and Terza 2001: 165). We expand on the range of applications of Terza's (1998) general formulation by providing an example to the endogenous regime switching, also known as a type-5 Tobit model, version of his methodology....
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...7 For applications of this model in various contexts using Terza's (1998) general methodology, see Terza (1998), McGeary and French (2000), and Kenkel and Terza (2001). (Terza 1998:129, McGeary and French 2000: 153, Kenkel and Terza (2001: 165) 8 Examples of GMM estimation of an endogenous treatment effect model appear in Vera-Hernandez (1999) and Schellhorn (2001)....
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...7 For applications of this model in various contexts using Terza's (1998) general methodology, see Terza (1998), McGeary and French (2000), and Kenkel and Terza (2001). (Terza 1998:129, McGeary and French 2000: 153, Kenkel and Terza (2001: 165) 8 Examples of GMM estimation of an endogenous treatment effect model appear in Vera-Hernandez (1999) and Schellhorn (2001). Vera-Hernandez (1999) analyzes the implications of duplicate coverage on demand for visits to specialist, and Schellhorn (2001) studies the effect of the choice of deductibles in the mandatory basic health insurance in Switzerland on physician service utilization....
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72 citations
"Endogenous switching of insurance r..." refers methods in this paper
...7 For applications of this model in various contexts using Terza's (1998) general methodology, see Terza (1998), McGeary and French (2000), and Kenkel and Terza (2001)....
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50 citations
"Endogenous switching of insurance r..." refers background in this paper
...…between types of insurance (e.g. fee-for-service versus health maintenance organization) or level of outof-pocket payment (e.g. RAND Health Insurance Experiment).3 Dowd et al. (1991) incorporate the endogenous switching of health care system in their estimation of health care utilization....
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...…system and health maintenance organizations in the Minneapolis – St. Paul area.4 Certainly, differences between managed care and fee-for-service health care systems exist, as found by Dowd et al. (1991), but these differences are narrow compared to the chasm separating the uninsured and insured....
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