Literature DB >> 15652677

Moral hazard and prescription medicine use in Australia--the patient perspective.

Evan Doran1, Jane Robertson, David Henry.   

Abstract

All Australian citizens are provided affordable access to prescription medicines through the nation's system of universal pharmaceutical subsidies--the pharmaceutical benefits scheme. The rapid increase in pharmaceutical related expenditure has generated the concern that Australians are taking advantage of prescription subsidies and are using more medicines than are necessary, thereby creating a 'moral hazard'. This concern is predicated on a number of assumptions about patient behaviour rather than on empirical observation. These assumptions amount to a view that patients are consumers who treat prescription medicines as common goods subject to informed and rational calculation of the cost and benefits of their use. This paper reports the findings of an in-depth interview study undertaken to explore how prescription cost influences Australians' medicine use. Qualitative data were analysed to compare medicine users' descriptions of the role of prescription cost in medicine use against the assumptions that underlie the belief in moral hazard. Moral hazard did not appear to be significantly operating in the accounts of medicine use collected for this study. Interviewees' accounts of medicine use revealed an act characterised by ambivalence, a mix of desire and antipathy, faith and suspicion. Medicines appeared in interviewees' accounts as both pharmacologically and symbolically potent substances, which despite their familiarity as objects, are often mysterious to non-expert patients. Cost appeared as a secondary factor in patients' decision to access a prescription medicine. Using a prescription was predicated on the medicine being necessary, with necessity typically established by an expert doctor prescribing the medicine. Prescription medicines did not appear as 'common goods' where subsidised access motivates a 'consumer' to demand more or make the prospect of prescription use more attractive or necessary.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15652677     DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.08.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  3 in total

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2.  The Main Factors of Induced Demand for Medicine Prescription: A Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Azam Mohamadloo; Saeed Zarein-Dolab; Ali Ramezankhani; Jamshid Jamshid
Journal:  Iran J Pharm Res       Date:  2019       Impact factor: 1.696

3.  Is 50 cent the price of the optimal copayment? - a qualitative study of patient opinions and attitudes in response to a 50 cent charge on prescription drugs in a publicly funded health system in Ireland.

Authors:  Sarah-Jo Sinnott; Marie Guinane; Helen Whelton; Stephen Byrne
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 2.655

  3 in total

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