| Literature DB >> 25729112 |
Abstract
I study how the misallocation of new technology to individuals who have low ex post returns to its use affects learning and adoption behavior. I focus on antimalarial treatment, which is frequently over-prescribed in many low-income country contexts where diagnostic tests are inaccessible. I show that misdiagnosis reduces average therapeutic effectiveness, because only a fraction of adopters actually have malaria, and slows the rate of social learning due to increased noise. I use data on adoption choices, the timing and duration of fever episodes, and individual blood slide confirmations of malarial status from a pilot study for a new malaria therapy in Tanzania to show that individuals whose reference groups experienced fewer misdiagnoses exhibited stronger learning effects and were more likely to adopt.Entities:
Keywords: ACT; Tanzania; diagnosis; malaria; social learning; technology adoption
Year: 2014 PMID: 25729112 PMCID: PMC4341843 DOI: 10.1093/restud/rdu020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Econ Stud ISSN: 0034-6527