Do consumer reports of health plan quality affect health plan selection?
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- Vol. 35, 933-47
Abstract
To learn whether consumer reports of health plan quality can affect health plan selection. A sample of 311 privately insured adults from Los Angeles County. The design was a fractional factorial experiment. Consumers reviewed materials on four hypothetical health plans and selected one. The health plans varied as to cost, coverage, type of plan, ability to keep one's doctor, and quality, as measured by the Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Study (CAHPS) survey. We used multinomial logistic regression to model each consumer's choice among health plans. In the absence of CAHPS information, 86 percent of consumers preferred plans that covered more services, even though they cost more. When CAHPS information was provided, consumers shifted to less expensive plans covering fewer services if CAHPS ratings identified those plans as higher quality (59 percent of consumers preferred plans covering more services). Consumer choices were unaffected when CAHPS ratings identified the more expensive plans covering more services as higher quality (89 percent of consumers preferred plans covering more services). This study establishes that, under certain realistic conditions, CAHPS ratings could affect consumer selection of health plans and ultimately contain costs. Other studies are needed to learn how to enhance exposure and use of CAHPS information in the real world as well as to identify other conditions in which CAHPS ratings could make a difference.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Epilogue: Early lessons from CAHPS Demonstrations and Evaluations. Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Study.1999
- Making Survey Results Easy to Report to ConsumersMedical Care, 1999
- Consumer Health Plan Choice: Current Knowledge and Future DirectionsAnnual Review of Public Health, 1997
- Choosing A Health Plan: What Information Will Consumers Use?Health Affairs, 1997
- What Type of Quality Information do Consumers Want in a Health Care Report Card?Medical Care Research and Review, 1996
- Role of Information in Consumer Selection of Health Plans1996
- Choice Matters: Enrollees' Views of Their Health PlansHealth Affairs, 1995
- Choosing among health insurance options: a study of new employees.1990
- Determinants of Choice and Change of Health Insurance PlanMedical Care, 1971
- Effect of pricing on perception of product quality.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1968