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Effects of Expanding Health Screening on Treatment - What Should We Expect? What Can We Learn? / Rebecca Mary Myerson, Darius Lakdawalla, Lisandro D. Colantonio, Monika Safford, David Meltzer.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Myerson, Rebecca Mary.
- Series:
- Working Paper Series (National Bureau of Economic Research) no. w24347.
- NBER working paper series no. w24347
- Language:
- English
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource: illustrations (black and white);
- Place of Publication:
- Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research 2018.
- Summary:
- Screening interventions can produce very different treatment outcomes, depending on the reasons why patients had been unscreened in the first place. Economists have paid scant attention to these complexities and their implications for evaluating screening programs. In this paper, we propose a simple economic framework to guide policy-makers and analysts in designing and evaluating the impact of screening on treatment uptake. We apply these insights to several salient empirical examples that illustrate the different kinds of effects screening programs might produce. Our empirical examples focus on contexts relevant to the top cause of death in the United States, heart disease. We find that currently undiagnosed patients differ from currently diagnosed patients in important ways, leading to lower predicted uptake of recommended treatment if these patients were diagnosed. Additionally, changes in the composition of diagnosed patients can produce misleading conclusions during policy analysis, such as spurious reductions in measured health system performance as screening expands.
- Notes:
- Print version record
- February 2018.
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