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      Health insurance and the demand for medical care: evidence from a randomized experiment.

      The American economic review
      Analysis of Variance, Deductibles and Coinsurance, Health Services Needs and Demand, economics, Health Services Research, Health Status, Insurance, Health, Insurance, Major Medical, Models, Theoretical, Random Allocation, Research Design, United States

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          Abstract

          We estimate how cost sharing, the portion of the bill the patient pays, affects the demand for medical services. The data come from a randomized experiment. A catastrophic insurance plan reduces expenditures 31 percent relative to zero out-of-pocket price. The price elasticity is approximately -0.2. We reject the hypothesis that less favorable coverage of outpatient services increases total expenditure (for example, by deterring preventive care or inducing hospitalization).

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