moral hazard
‘MORAL HAZARD’ IN HEALTH CARE: DUPLICITY ON STEROIDS
Posted by John Geyman MD PNHP on September 21, 2011 - 1:52pmUnder the theory of moral hazard, it is postulated that insured people overuse health care services and that patients themselves are a leading cause of health care inflation. If they would just have more “skin in the game” through enough cost-sharing (co-payments, deductibles and other restrictions), it is assumed that costs could be reined in.
Market Mythology in Health Care: Why Markets Can Never Control Health Care Costs
Posted by John Geyman MD PNHP on September 12, 2008 - 12:58pmMarket theorists have been telling us for years that the competitive marketplace will keep prices under control, as well as fix problems of access and quality of health care. This statement by senior fellows of the Hoover Institution in 2006 reflects market ideology which has framed health care policy for three decades:
“Greater reliance on individual choice and free markets are the solutions to what ails our health care system . . . A handful of policy changes that harness the power of markets for health services have the potential to give patients and their physicians more control over health-care choices, create more health insurance options, lower health costs, reduce the number of uninsured persons— and give workers a pay increase to boot.”

