Microeconomic surplus in health care: Applied economic theory in health care in four European countries

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Abstract

Introduction: In economic theory economic surplus refers to two related quantities: Consumer and producer surplus. Applying this theory to health care "convenience" could be one way how consumer benefits might manifest itself. Methods: Various areas of economic surplus were identified and subsequently screened and analyzed in Germany, Spain, The Netherlands, and the UK: Cesarean births, emergency room visits (nights or weekends), drug availability after test results, and response surplus. A targeted literature search was being conducted to identify the associated costs. Finally the economic surplus (convenience value) was calculated. Results: The economic surplus for different health care areas was being calculated. The highest economic surplus was obtained for the example of response surplus IVF-treatments in The Netherlands. Conclusion: The analyzed examples in this article support the underlying hypothesis for this research: "Value of convenience defined as the consumer surplus in health care can be shown in different health care settings." Again, this hypothesis should be accepted as a starting point in this research area and hence further primary research is bly recommended in order to fully proof this concept. © 2013 Walzer, Nuijten, Wiesner, Kaier, Johansson and Oertel.

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APA

Walzer, S., Nuijten, M., Wiesner, C., Kaier, K., Johansson, P. O., & Oertel, S. (2013). Microeconomic surplus in health care: Applied economic theory in health care in four European countries. Frontiers in Pharmacology, 4 FEB. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2013.00017

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