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Ulric B. and Evelyn L. Bray Social Sciences Seminar

Wednesday, May 25, 2022
4:00pm to 5:00pm
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Baxter Lecture Hall
Information and Disparities in Health Care Quality: Evidence from GP Choice in England
Zach Brown, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Michigan,

Abstract: Low-income patients tend to receive lower quality health care. They have limited access to high quality options and---even conditional on access---are less likely to choose high performing providers.  We show that differential information about quality is an important determinant of this disparity. Our empirical strategy exploits the temporary presence of a website that publicly displayed summary star ratings of general practitioner (GP) offices in England.  Regression discontinuity (RD) estimates show that, on average, patients respond sharply to the information on the website, and that this response is almost entirely driven by residents of low-income neighborhoods. We incorporate these RD moments in a structural demand model that allows for consumer inertia as well as heterogeneity by income in baseline information and preferences. Our results indicate that a meaningful fraction of the income-quality gradient could be eliminated by removing informational differences.

For more information, please contact Letty Diaz by phone at 626-395-1255 or by email at [email protected].