Information, Switching Costs, and Consumer Choice : Evidence from Two Randomized Field Experiments in Swedish Primary Health Care
(2017) In Working Papers 2017(7).- Abstract
- Consumers of services that are financed by a third party, such as publicly financed health care or firm-sponsored health plans, are often allowed to freely choose provider. The rationale is that consumer choice may improve the matching of consumers and providers and spur quality competition. Such improvements are contingent on consumers having access to comparative information about providers and acting on this information when making their choice. However, in the presence of information frictions and switching costs, consumers may have limited ability to find suitable providers. We use two large-scale randomized field experiments in primary health care to examine if the choice of provider is affected when consumers receive comparative... (More)
- Consumers of services that are financed by a third party, such as publicly financed health care or firm-sponsored health plans, are often allowed to freely choose provider. The rationale is that consumer choice may improve the matching of consumers and providers and spur quality competition. Such improvements are contingent on consumers having access to comparative information about providers and acting on this information when making their choice. However, in the presence of information frictions and switching costs, consumers may have limited ability to find suitable providers. We use two large-scale randomized field experiments in primary health care to examine if the choice of provider is affected when consumers receive comparative information by postal mail and small costs associated with switching are reduced. The first experiment targeted a subset of the general population in the Swedish region Skåane, and the second targeted new residents in the region, who should have less prior information and lower switching costs. In both cases, the propensity to switch provider increased significantly after the intervention. The effects were larger for new residents than for the general population, and were driven by individuals living reasonably close to alternative providers. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/2209ec95-daf5-48dd-9711-64e53648bc92
- author
- Anell, Anders LU ; Dietrichson, Jens ; Ellegård, Lina Maria LU and Kjellsson, Gustav
- organization
- publishing date
- 2017-05-17
- type
- Working paper/Preprint
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- consumer choice, information, switching costs, primary health care, field experiments, D83, I11, I18
- in
- Working Papers
- volume
- 2017
- issue
- 7
- pages
- 52 pages
- publisher
- Department of Economics, Lund University
- project
- Public Management Research
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 2209ec95-daf5-48dd-9711-64e53648bc92
- date added to LUP
- 2017-05-22 13:44:00
- date last changed
- 2020-12-04 11:11:30
@misc{2209ec95-daf5-48dd-9711-64e53648bc92, abstract = {{Consumers of services that are financed by a third party, such as publicly financed health care or firm-sponsored health plans, are often allowed to freely choose provider. The rationale is that consumer choice may improve the matching of consumers and providers and spur quality competition. Such improvements are contingent on consumers having access to comparative information about providers and acting on this information when making their choice. However, in the presence of information frictions and switching costs, consumers may have limited ability to find suitable providers. We use two large-scale randomized field experiments in primary health care to examine if the choice of provider is affected when consumers receive comparative information by postal mail and small costs associated with switching are reduced. The first experiment targeted a subset of the general population in the Swedish region Skåane, and the second targeted new residents in the region, who should have less prior information and lower switching costs. In both cases, the propensity to switch provider increased significantly after the intervention. The effects were larger for new residents than for the general population, and were driven by individuals living reasonably close to alternative providers.}}, author = {{Anell, Anders and Dietrichson, Jens and Ellegård, Lina Maria and Kjellsson, Gustav}}, keywords = {{consumer choice; information; switching costs; primary health care; field experiments; D83; I11; I18}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{05}}, note = {{Working Paper}}, number = {{7}}, publisher = {{Department of Economics, Lund University}}, series = {{Working Papers}}, title = {{Information, Switching Costs, and Consumer Choice : Evidence from Two Randomized Field Experiments in Swedish Primary Health Care}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/25840870/wp17_7.pdf}}, volume = {{2017}}, year = {{2017}}, }