Why Do the Insured Use More Health Care? The Role of Insurance-Induced Unhealthy Behaviors Yingying Dong Boston College 10/16/2007.

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Why Do the Insured Use More Health Care? The Role of Insurance-Induced Unhealthy Behaviors Yingying Dong Boston College 10/16/2007

1/25 A Real Life Story From the New York Times (Nov. 25, 2002): Mr. & Ms. Brooks dropped their health insurance because of increased premiums. Then… Mr. Brooks, 50, has stopped taking Lipitor to control high cholesterol and has started taking over-the-counter herbal supplements. Ms. Brooks no longer takes Singulair for asthma and has adopted an exercise program intended to regulate her breathing. Ms. Brooks estimates they are saving $150 a month by not using prescription drugs. We changed our diets a lot to help the effectiveness of the supplements, and maybe thats a good thing, she said. --Broder, John. Problem of Lost Health Benefits is Reaching into the Middle Class. Also cited by Dave & Kaestner (2006)

2/25 Motivation – (1) Health insurance is associated with an increased use of health care. (Yelin et al, 2001; Meer and Rosen, 2003; Pauly, 2005; Bajari, Hong and Khwaja, 2006; Deb and Trivedi, 2006) Usually assumed: Individuals who potentially have a greater need of heath care are more motivated to get insured (selection effect). Insurance reduces the effective price of health care and hence induces individuals to use more. Whats missing: Individuals once insured, may become less cautious about their unhealthy behaviors, so they may need more health care. Unhealthy behaviors: Drinking, Smoking, Insufficient Exercise, and unhealthy diet

3/25 Motivation- (2) Intuitions: Insurance lowers the offsetting cost for the negative health consequences of unhealthy behaviors. disincentive effect Car insurance reduces precaution and stimulates car accidents; Workplace injury compensations increase injuries. Individuals with health problems substitute medication for behavioral improvement. substitution effect Easily accessible health care may distort the perceived risk of unhealthy behaviors. distorted image

4/25 Illustration of Causalities True Moral Hazard: the disincentive effect of health insurance on individuals healthy behaviors, which may generate additional medical care demand. Pure Price Effect: the effect that health insurance lowers the effective price of health care and hence induces individuals to use more care ceteris paribus. Health Insurance Use of Health Care Selection Effect (Ex post) Moral Hazard Health Insurance Use of Health Care Selection Effect Pure Price Effect Health Related Behaviors True Moral Hazard (1) Causalities traditionally studied(2) A fuller View of Causalities Selection Effect

5/25 Literature Review Most existing literature studies the insurance effect on medical utilization; a small strand examines the insurance effect on health behaviors. They do not look at the structural causal relationships among the three. Literature examining the insurance effect on medical utilization: Reviews: Zweifel and Manning (2000), Buchmueller et al (2005) Studies examining the insurance effect on prevention, including behaviors (discrete outcomes): Kenkel (2000), Courbage and Coulon (2004) A few studies that do consider all three focus on discrete outcomes Khwaja (2002, 2006) and Card et al. (2004)

6/25 Research Questions & Approaches (1) What are the effects of health insurance on individuals health behaviors? (2) What is the (total) effect of health insurance on health care utilization? (3) Within the total effect of health insurance on health care utilization, how much is caused by the pure price effect, and how much is caused by individuals behavior change when they have insurance? Start from a theoretical model to derive the structural causal relationships among the insurance decision, health behaviors, and health care utilization Solve the structural model to obtain the semi-reduced form equations determining behaviors and care utilization as functions of the endogenous health insurance status Derive the structural parameters of interest: the direct and indirect effects of health insurance on health care utilization Empirical analysis adopts the generalized Tobit specification with transformations on the dependent and lagged dependent variables.

7/25 Basic Theoretical Model – (1) A two-period dynamic forward-looking model; Assume rational addiction, marginal utility of consumption depending on health status, and uncertainty, Utility function: Health evolution equation: Budget constraint: C t = Composite good consumption; B t = (B t 1, B t 2, B t 3 ), Behaviors: drinking, smoking and exercise ; H t = Initial Health status/Health stock; M t = Medical care utilization; = permanent taste parameter; = taste shifter; s t = health shock, which may depend on H t, B t ; W t = present value of total Wealth; I t = Insurance dummy; d t = the insurer co-payment rate.

8/25 Basic Theoretical Model – (2) The individual invests in health in 1 st period (t), and bears the addiction and negative health consequences of unhealthy behaviors in 2 nd period ( t+1 ). C: choice set : {I t } {C t, B t, M t } {C t+1, B t+1 } F: information set: {B t,H t,, t } {B t,H t, I t,, t } {B t,H t+1,I t,, t+1, s t+1 } S: shock set: {s t, s t+1, t+1 } {s t, s t+1, t+1 } {s t+1 } Expected Utility maximization s.t. At the beginning of 1 st period 1 st period2 nd period

9/25 Structural & Semi-reduced Form Equations Maximizing expected utility by backward induction Structural equations (FOCs) for M t, B t,, and the insurance decision I t B t-1, P It : exclusion restrictions f I ( ) = P It * : willingness-to-pay for insurance Intuitions Solve (1),(2) for B t and M t semi-reduced form equations Assume U( ) is quadratic and health production function is linear linear functions for B t and M t and the I t index

10/25 Direct and Indirect Insurance Effects on Care Utilization - (1) Eqs. (1), (4) and (5) imply the following decomposition Total effect = direct price effect + indirect effect Obtained from Eq. (4) Obtained from Eq. (5) To be backed out (I) (II) Obtained from the Eq. (5) Obtained from Eq. (4)

11/25 Direct and Indirect Insurance Effects on Care Utilization– (2) (I) is a vector form of (II) is the solution of a linear equation system Three unknowns

12/25 General Data Problems A significant fraction of zeros (68% zero drinking, 83% zero smoking) Discrete change between zero & non-zero consumption extensive margin of the insurance effect Continuous change in the positive level of consumption intensive margin of the insurance effect Two part specification: Insurance effect on the probability of non-zero consumption Insurance effect on the level of consumption, given participation Generalized Tobit model (sample selection model) A skewed distribution of positive observations (nonnormality) Transformation on the dependent and lagged dependent variables IHS (Inverse hyperbolic sine), Box-Cox, log

13/25 Empirical Model & Identification Generalized Tobit (sample selection) model with transformations on the dependent and lagged dependent variables where Y t = B t or M t ; Insurance is endogenous joint estimate I t and B t or M t. P It is an exclusion restriction (Instrumental Variable): Age65 dummy (Card, Dobkin and Maestas, 2004) Self-employment status (Meer and Rosen, 2003; Deb and Trivedi, 2006)

14/25 IV Validity-(1) Relevance insurance holding rate: Age<65 (88.1%), Age65 (99.1%) Self-employed(78.7% ), Non Self-employed (92.6%) Exogeneity Measures of medical care utilization and health behaviors would have evolved smoothly with age in the absence of the discrete change in insurance coverage at age 65. Include in all equations a smooth age profile function, tentatively include the age dummy in the outcome equations, coefficients are not significant. Sargans and Basmanns over-identification tests Hansens J test Using panel data check the transition into/out of self-employment on behaviors

15/25 IV Validity-(2) Treatment 1Control 1Diff.-In-Diff.P-value Change in drinking (level).271(.300) -.087(.197).358(.359).319 Change in drinking (prob.)-.028(.021)-.029(.014).001(.025).965 Change in smoking (prob.)-.009(.008)-.014(.007).005(.010).637 Change in exercising (prob.)-.050(.033)-.027(.018)-.023(.038).536 Treatment 1Control 1Diff.-In-Diff.P-value Change in drinking (level)-.509(.419) -.207(.041).301(.421).476 Change in drinking (prob.)-.022(.028)-.030(.004).008(.028).787 Change in smoking (prob.)-.029(.015)-.012(.002)-.017(.015).267 Change in exercising (prob.).029(.041)-.014(.005).043(.041).300 Table 2-(a) The impact of transition out of self-employment on health behaviors Table 2-(b) The impact of transition into self-employment on health behaviors

16/25 Sample Description RAND HRS : 3 rd, 4 th and 5 th (Year 96, 98, 00) waves of data Not include: Age 70, On social security disability insurance, Deceased within 2 years since being observed in the sample N=14,289 Dependent variables : Dummies: smoking, exercising ( 3 or more times per week ), drinking, visiting a doctor/hospital ( at least once for the past two years ) Levels: # of alcoholic drinks consumed per week # of doctor/hospital visits per year

17/25 Summary Statistics- (Dependant Var.s) Insured (n=13,016)Uninsured (n=1,273) MeanStd. Dev.MeanStd. Dev. Visiting a doctor/hospital # of visits Current period: Smoking Exercising Drinking Positive # of alcoholic drinks The insured are more likely to visit a doctor or hospital, and they also have more visits on average than the uninsured. Insurance is associated with healthier behaviors; e.g., The insured are less likely to smoke; more likely to drink, but on average drink much less. These may not be causal: confounding factors or selection effects.

18/25 Summary Statistics- (Covariates) Insured (n=13,016)Uninsured (n=1,273) MeanStd. Dev.MeanStd. Dev. Last period: Smoking Exercising Drinking Positive # of alcoholic drinks Last period diagnosed disease*: Cancer Hypertension Heart disease Lung disease Age The insured have healthier behaviors ex ante (last period); The insured are in general older, tend to have chronic diseases; * This list leaves out some chronic diseases due to space limit.

19/25 Summary Statistics- (Covariates) Insured (n=13,016)Uninsured (n=1,273) MeanStd. Dev.MeanStd. Dev. Male Hispanic Last period health status: Fair/ Poor Good/Very good Excellent Education: Less than high-school High-school or GED College or above Income($1000) Number of children The insured also tend to have higher income, higher education…

20/25 Estimated Insurance Effects Table 1 Insurance effects on the probabilities of using health care and health behaviors Dependent variableCoeff. Of Insurance(SE)Marginal Effect Visiting a doctor/hospital (0/1).037(.146).008 Exercising(0/1)-.112(.127) Smoking(0/1).166(.192).017 Drinking(0/1)-.187(.145)-.065 ***Significant at.01 level; Table 2 Insurance effects on the levels of health care utilization and drinking HISBox-CoxLog % change (SE) # # # # of visits / year.347(.069) *** (.068) *** (.057) *** 1.58 # of alcoholic drinks/week.043(.097) (.095) (.093).214

21/25 Further Investigation on Drinking Puzzle 1: Insurance may decrease the probability of drinking, although it may increase the amount of drinking by the drinkers. Puzzle 2: The insurance effect on the probability of drinking and that on smoking have opposite signs. Unlike smoking, a low level of drinking is generally considered as healthy. In the data, the insured have a smaller proportion of smokers, but a larger proportion of drinkers; whereas the insured drinkers tend to be light drinkers. Distinguish between light drinking and heavy drinking Disincentive effect of insurance on healthy behaviors: Does insurance holding encourage heavy drinking?

22/25 Further Investigation on Heavy Drinking Table 3 Insurance effects on heavy drinking Heavy drinkingProbability Weekly # of drinks (IHS model) Cutoff percentile # of drinks Sample mean Coeff.(SE) Marginal effect Marginal effect (SE) Change in level 50 th > (.175) (.066) ** th > (.165) (.071) ** th (mean)> (.168) (.070) * th > (.188) (.074) ** th > (.211) (.100) ** th > (.278) (.099) ** 6.98 * Significant at.1 level; **Significant at.05 level; ***Significant at.01 level

23/25 Increased Number of Visits due to Insurance-Induced Drinking Increased medical utilization due to insurance-induced drinking: Among the above-the-median heavy drinkers, the increased number of visits caused by insurance-induced drinking is at most 0.3%. Averaging it over the whole population will make it even smaller. If the number of visits caused by the insurance-induced changes in smoking and exercise is of the same magnitude, then the increased number of visits caused by insurance-induced unhealthy behaviors as summarized by drinking, smoking and insufficient exercise is less than 1%.

24/25 Conclusions Health insurance encourages individuals unhealthy behaviors, in particular, heavy drinking, but this does not induce an immediate perceivable increase in their use of health care. The insurance effects at the extensive margin are in general less significant than those at the intensive margin. Eg. The effects on the probabilities of smoking, heavy drinking, and visiting a doctor/hospital are small and insignificant; The effects on the quantity of heavy drinking and on the number of visits are more considerable and statistically significant. Within the total effect of insurance on health care utilization, the pure price effect is dominant. Policy implications

Presenter: Yingying Dong Thank you !!!