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Published in: The European Journal of Health Economics 8/2017

Open Access 01-11-2017 | Original Paper

A method to simulate incentives for cost containment under various cost sharing designs: an application to a first-euro deductible and a doughnut hole

Authors: D. Cattel, R. C. van Kleef, R. C. J. A. van Vliet

Published in: The European Journal of Health Economics | Issue 8/2017

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Abstract

Many health insurance schemes include deductibles to provide consumers with cost containment incentives (CCI) and to counteract moral hazard. Policymakers are faced with choices on the implementation of a specific cost sharing design. One of the guiding principles in this decision process could be which design leads to the strongest CCI. Despite the vast amount of literature on the effects of cost sharing, the relative effects of specific cost sharing designs—e.g., a traditional deductible versus a doughnut hole—will mostly be absent for a certain context. This papers aims at developing a simulation model to approximate the relative effects of different deductible modalities on the CCI. We argue that the CCI depends on the probability that healthcare expenses end up in the deductible range and the expected healthcare expenses given that they end up in the deductible range. Our empirical application shows that different deductible modalities result in different CCIs and that the CCI under a certain modality differs across risk-groups.
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Footnotes
1
Or a first-dollar deductible.
 
2
In this paper we do not pursue optimization of the deductible design. We use designs from practice to illustrate the methodology to simulate the CCI. Nevertheless, the framework can be used as a tool to gain insight in the properties of other deductible modalities and compare deductible designs in terms of the CCI.
 
3
Expected expenses are considered to be the total expected healthcare expenses that fall under the basic benefit package.
 
4
Nevertheless, the conceptual framework can be refined to facilitate simulation of the CCI during the contract period. By determining the CCI on multiple moments (i.e., by repeating the procedure that is described in this paper), the other two parameters can be taken into account.
 
5
Or: both individuals have an equal probability that healthcare expenses exceed the deductible amount [i.e., P(Y < d) < 1].
 
6
We also took into consideration other specifications of the model varying in terms of distribution and link-function. We opted for a GLM with a gamma distribution and a log-link function based on a comparison of mean, standard deviation, minimum, maximum and mean absolute predicted error of actual and expected expenses in the sample and per expenditure quintile.
 
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Metadata
Title
A method to simulate incentives for cost containment under various cost sharing designs: an application to a first-euro deductible and a doughnut hole
Authors
D. Cattel
R. C. van Kleef
R. C. J. A. van Vliet
Publication date
01-11-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
The European Journal of Health Economics / Issue 8/2017
Print ISSN: 1618-7598
Electronic ISSN: 1618-7601
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10198-016-0843-9

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