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A theory of waiting time reporting and quality signalling

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 01:58 authored by Yijuan Chen, Juergen Meinecke, Peter Sivey
We develop a theoretical model to study a policy that publicly reports hospital waiting times. We characterize two effects of such a policy: the 'competition effect' that drives hospitals to compete for patients by increasing service rates and reducing waiting times and the 'signaling effect' that allows patients to distinguish a high-quality hospital from a low-quality one. While for a low-quality hospital both effects help reduce waiting time, for a high-quality hospital, they act in opposite directions. We show that the competition effect will outweigh the signaling effect for the high-quality hospital, and consequently, both hospitals' waiting times will be reduced by the introduction of the policy. This result holds in a policy environment where maximum waiting time targets are not binding.

History

Journal

Health Economics

Volume

25

Issue

11

Start page

1355

End page

1371

Total pages

17

Publisher

John Wiley and Sons

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2015 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd

Former Identifier

2006066454

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-12-14

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