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Effect of financial relationships on the behaviors of health care professionals: a review of the evidence

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Effect of financial relationships on the behaviors of health care professionals: a review of the evidence
Abstract
Summary. This paper explores the empirical evidence regarding the impact financial relationships on the behavior of health care providers, specifically, physicians. We identify and synthesize peer-reviewed data addressing whether financial incentives are causally related to patient outcomes and health care costs. We cover three main areas where financial conflicts of interest arise and may have an observable relationship to health care practices: (1) physicians' roles as self-referrers, (2) insurance reimbursement schemes that create incentives for certain clinical choices over others, and (3) financial relationships between physicians and the drug and device industries. We found a well-developed scientific literature consisting of dozens of empirical studies, some that allow stronger causal inferences than others, but which altogether show that such financial conflicts of interests can, and sometimes do, impact physicians' clinical decisions. Further research is warranted to document the causal relationship of such changes on health outcomes and the cost of care, but the current base of evidence is sufficiently robust to motivate policy reform.
Publication
The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics: A Journal of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics
Volume
40
Issue
3
Pages
452-466
Date
2012
Journal Abbr
J Law Med Ethics
Language
eng
DOI
10.1111/j.1748-720X.2012.00678.x
ISSN
1748-720X
Short Title
Effect of financial relationships on the behaviors of health care professionals
Library Catalog
PubMed
Extra
PMID: 23061573
Citation
Robertson, C., Rose, S., & Kesselheim, A. S. (2012). Effect of financial relationships on the behaviors of health care professionals: a review of the evidence. The Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics: A Journal of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics, 40(3), 452–466. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-720X.2012.00678.x