Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits. / Huang, Shan; Ullrich, Hannes.

2021.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Huang, S & Ullrich, H 2021 'Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits'. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3895694

APA

Huang, S., & Ullrich, H. (2021). Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits. DIW Berlin Discussion Paper Nr. 1958 https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3895694

Vancouver

Huang S, Ullrich H. Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits. 2021. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3895694

Author

Huang, Shan ; Ullrich, Hannes. / Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits. 2021. (DIW Berlin Discussion Paper; Nr. 1958).

Bibtex

@techreport{52d4ff2ed2ad41d8b56471e64dd7fc89,
title = "Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits",
abstract = "Human antibiotic consumption is considered the main driver of antibiotic resistance. Reducing human antibiotic consumption without compromising health care quality poses one of the most important global health policy challenges. A crucial condition for designing effective policies is to identify who drives antibiotic treatment decisions, physicians or patient demand. We measure the causal effect of physician practice style on antibiotic intake and health outcomes exploiting variation in patient-physician relations due to physician exits in general practice in Denmark. We estimate that physician practice style accounts for 53 to 56 percent of between-clinic differences in all antibiotic consumption, and for 74 to 81 percent in the consumption of second-line antibiotic drugs. We find little evidence that low prescribing styles adversely affect health outcomes measured as preventable hospitalizations due to infections. Our findings suggest that policies to curb antibiotic resistance are most effective when aimed at improving physician decision-making, in particular when they target high prescribers. High prescribing practice styles are positively associated with physician age and negatively with staff size and the availability of diagnostic tools, suggesting that improvements in the quality of diagnostic information is an important path to improved decisions.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Anotibiotic prescribing, practice styles, General Practitioners",
author = "Shan Huang and Hannes Ullrich",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.3895694",
language = "English",
series = "DIW Berlin Discussion Paper",
publisher = " German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin)",
number = "1958",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = " German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin)",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits

AU - Huang, Shan

AU - Ullrich, Hannes

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Human antibiotic consumption is considered the main driver of antibiotic resistance. Reducing human antibiotic consumption without compromising health care quality poses one of the most important global health policy challenges. A crucial condition for designing effective policies is to identify who drives antibiotic treatment decisions, physicians or patient demand. We measure the causal effect of physician practice style on antibiotic intake and health outcomes exploiting variation in patient-physician relations due to physician exits in general practice in Denmark. We estimate that physician practice style accounts for 53 to 56 percent of between-clinic differences in all antibiotic consumption, and for 74 to 81 percent in the consumption of second-line antibiotic drugs. We find little evidence that low prescribing styles adversely affect health outcomes measured as preventable hospitalizations due to infections. Our findings suggest that policies to curb antibiotic resistance are most effective when aimed at improving physician decision-making, in particular when they target high prescribers. High prescribing practice styles are positively associated with physician age and negatively with staff size and the availability of diagnostic tools, suggesting that improvements in the quality of diagnostic information is an important path to improved decisions.

AB - Human antibiotic consumption is considered the main driver of antibiotic resistance. Reducing human antibiotic consumption without compromising health care quality poses one of the most important global health policy challenges. A crucial condition for designing effective policies is to identify who drives antibiotic treatment decisions, physicians or patient demand. We measure the causal effect of physician practice style on antibiotic intake and health outcomes exploiting variation in patient-physician relations due to physician exits in general practice in Denmark. We estimate that physician practice style accounts for 53 to 56 percent of between-clinic differences in all antibiotic consumption, and for 74 to 81 percent in the consumption of second-line antibiotic drugs. We find little evidence that low prescribing styles adversely affect health outcomes measured as preventable hospitalizations due to infections. Our findings suggest that policies to curb antibiotic resistance are most effective when aimed at improving physician decision-making, in particular when they target high prescribers. High prescribing practice styles are positively associated with physician age and negatively with staff size and the availability of diagnostic tools, suggesting that improvements in the quality of diagnostic information is an important path to improved decisions.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Anotibiotic prescribing

KW - practice styles

KW - General Practitioners

U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.3895694

DO - 10.2139/ssrn.3895694

M3 - Working paper

T3 - DIW Berlin Discussion Paper

BT - Physician Effects in Antibiotic Prescribing: Evidence from Physician Exits

ER -

ID: 292144612