van Kleef, Richard C.; Reuser, Mieke; McGuire, Thomas G.; Armstrong, John; Beck, Konstantin; Brammli-Greenberg, Shuli; Ellis, Randall P.; Paolucci, Francesco; Schokkaert, Erik; Wasem, Jürgen:
Scope and Incentives for Risk Selection in Health Insurance Markets With Regulated Competition : A Conceptual Framework and International Comparison
In: Medical Care Research and Review (2024), in press
2024Review in ZeitschriftOA Hybrid
MedizinWirtschaftswissenschaftenFakultät für Wirtschaftswissenschaften » Fachgebiet Betriebswirtschaftslehre » Medizinmanagement
Damit verbunden: 1 Publikation(en)
Titel in Englisch:
Scope and Incentives for Risk Selection in Health Insurance Markets With Regulated Competition : A Conceptual Framework and International Comparison
Autor*in:
van Kleef, Richard C.
Sonstiges
korrespondierende*r Autor*in
;
Reuser, Mieke
;
McGuire, Thomas G.
;
Armstrong, John
;
Beck, Konstantin
;
Brammli-Greenberg, Shuli
;
Ellis, Randall P.
;
Paolucci, Francesco
;
Schokkaert, Erik
;
Wasem, JürgenUDE
GND
110790677
LSF ID
5214
ORCID
0000-0001-9653-168XORCID iD
Sonstiges
der Hochschule zugeordnete*r Autor*in
Erscheinungsjahr:
2024
Open Access?:
OA Hybrid
PubMed ID
Scopus ID
Notiz:
in press
Sprache des Textes:
Englisch
Schlagwort, Thema:
health insurance ; international comparison ; regulated competition ; risk selection
Ressourcentyp:
Text

Abstract in Englisch:

In health insurance markets with regulated competition, regulators face the challenge of preventing risk selection. This paper provides a framework for analyzing the scope (i.e., potential actions by insurers and consumers) and incentives for risk selection in such markets. Our approach consists of three steps. First, we describe four types of risk selection: (a) selection by consumers in and out of the market, (b) selection by consumers between high- and low-value plans, (c) selection by insurers via plan design, and (d) selection by insurers via other channels such as marketing, customer service, and supplementary insurance. In a second step, we develop a conceptual framework of how regulation and features of health insurance markets affect the scope and incentives for risk selection along these four dimensions. In a third step, we use this framework to compare nine health insurance markets with regulated competition in Australia, Europe, Israel, and the United States.