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New Study: Public Options Can Drastically Lower Healthcare Costs Due to Government Bargaining Power
- Date
Unleashing the Boundaries of Healthcare Innovation
Faculty
CBS Faculty Research on Healthcare
Taxing Universities
Single-Threshold Food Labeling Policies
- Authors
- Date
- October 3, 2024
- Format
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Working Paper
We study the aggregate and heterogeneous effects of a front-of-package labeling policy implemented in Chile. We find that consumers reduced their sugar and caloric intake by 9% and 6%, reductions explained by consumers purchasing healthier products and firms reformulating their offerings. On the demand side, labels prompt consumers to substitute within categories rather than between categories. Within-category responses are more pronounced when labels provide new information.
Managers and Public Hospital Performance
We study whether, and how, managers can increase government productivity in the context of public health provision. Using novel data from public hospitals in Chile, we document that top managers (CEOs) account for a significant amount of variation in hospital mortality. Using a difference-in-differences design, we show how the introduction of a competitive selection system for recruiting public hospital CEOs reduced hospital mortality by approximately 7%. The effect is not explained by a change in patient composition and is robust to several alternative explanations.
The Economics of the Public Option: Evidence from Local Pharmaceutical Markets
- Authors
- Date
- March 1, 2024
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- American Economic Review
We study the effects of competition by state-owned firms, leveraging the decentralized entry of public pharmacies to local markets in Chile. Public pharmacies sell the same drugs at a third of private pharmacy prices, because of stronger upstream bargaining and market power in the private sector, but are of lower quality. Public pharmacies induced market segmentation and price increases in the private sector, which benefited the switchers to the public option but harmed the stayers.
Choice Architecture for Healthier Insurance Decisions: Ordering and Partitioning Together Can Improve Consumer Choice
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 2024
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Marketing
Making good health insurance decisions is important for health outcomes and longevity, but consumers’ errors are well documented. The authors examine whether targeted choice architecture interventions can reduce these mistakes. The article examines the interaction of two choice architecture tools on improved consumer insurance decisions in online health care exchanges: (1) ordering the options from best to worst based on a high-quality user model and (2) partitioning the total set of options.
Nudging App Adoption: Choice Architecture Facilitates Consumer Uptake of Mobile Apps.
- Authors
- Date
- July 1, 2023
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Marketing
How can firms encourage consumers to adopt smartphone apps? The authors show that several inexpensive choice architecture techniques can make users more likely to enable important app features and complete app onboarding. In six preregistered experiments (n = 5,968) and a field experiment (n = 594,997), choice architecture interventions manipulating choice sequence, color, and wording of app adoption decisions dramatically increased app adoption. Across experiments, integrating multiple feature decisions into a single choice increased adoption.
Thriving under pressure: The effects of stress-related wise interventions on affect, sleep, and exam performance for disadvantaged college students
- Authors
- Date
- December 22, 2022
- Format
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Newspaper/Magazine Article
- Publication
- Emotion
Nearly all students experience stress as they pursue important academic goals. Because stress can be magnified for students from disadvantaged backgrounds, it becomes important to identify interventions that can help mitigate this stress, particularly for these populations as they enter academic environments. We examine the effects of stress mindset and stress management interventions administered to students from disadvantaged backgrounds (N = 140) before freshman year.
Regional personality differences predict variation in COVID-19 infections and social distancing behavior
- Authors
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Heinrich Peters, Friedrich Gotz, Tobias Ebert, Sandrine Muller, P. Rentfrow, Samuel Gosling, Marin Obschonka, Daniel Ames, Jeff Potter, and Sandra Matz
- Date
- September 22, 2022
- Format
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Working Paper
The early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic revealed stark regional variation in the spread of the virus. While previous research has highlighted the impact of regional differences in sociodemographic and economic factors, we argue that regional differences in social and compliance behaviors-the very behaviors through which the virus is transmitted-are critical drivers of the spread of COVID-19, particularly in the early stages of the pandemic.
Identifying Factors Predicting Kidney Graft Survival in Chile Using Elastic-Net-Regularized Cox Regression
- Authors
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Marcelo Olivares, L. Magga, S Maturana, M. Valdevenito, J. Cabezas, J. Chapochnick, F. González, A. Kompatzki, H. Muller, J. Pefaur, C. Ulloa, and R. Valjalo
- Date
- September 6, 2022
- Format
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Journal Article
- Journal
- Medicina
We developed a predictive statistical model to identify donor–recipient characteristics related to kidney graft survival in the Chilean population. Given the large number of potential predictors relative to the sample size, we implemented an automated variable selection mechanism that could be revised in future studies as more national data is collected. Materials and Methods: A retrospective multicenter study was conducted to analyze data from 822 adult kidney transplant recipients from adult donors between 1998 and 2018.