Non-Life-Threatening Ailments and Rational Patience
Abstract
The time at which a rational patient might choose an elective medical procedure for a non-life-threatening ailment is contemplated. The resulting model is purposely uncomplicated but general, and accounts for several basic factors that might affect such a decision. One such factor is that a patient cannot know with certainty the degree to which the medical procedure will be successful. Even so, patients have information about the expected outcome of the procedure and its risk, and about how the expected outcome and risk are affected by medical technological progress and surgeon experience. The effect of changes in exogenous variables on the timing of the medical procedure and on patient welfare are investigated. It is shown that risk averse and prudent patients behave in an unambiguous manner in response to changes in all of the exogenous variables.
Other description
JEL Codes: D15; I12
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2019-08Author
Bolin, Kristian
Caputo, Michael R.
Keywords
Health Behavior
Optimal Timing
Medical Decisions
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
772
Language
eng