Selection Incentives for Health Insurers in the Presence of Sophisticated Risk Adjustment.
Richard C van KleefFrank EijkenaarRené C J A van VlietPublished in: Medical care research and review : MCRR (2019)
This article analyzes selection incentives for insurers in the Dutch basic health insurance market, which operates with community-rated premiums and sophisticated risk adjustment. Selection incentives result from the interplay of three market characteristics: possible actions by insurers, consumer response to these actions, and predictable variation in profitability of insurance contracts. After a qualitative analysis of the first two characteristics our primary objective is to identify the third. Using a combination of claims data (N = 16.8 million) and survey information (N = 387,195), we find substantial predictable variation in profitability. On average, people in good health are profitable, while those in poor health are unprofitable. We conclude that Dutch insurers indeed face selection incentives. A complete measure of selection incentives, however, captures the correlation between individual-level profitability and consumer response to insurer-actions. Obtaining insight in this correlation is an important direction for further research.
Keyphrases
- health insurance
- health information
- healthcare
- smoking cessation
- mental health
- public health
- affordable care act
- hiv testing
- health promotion
- social media
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- climate change
- men who have sex with men
- big data
- human health
- hiv infected
- deep learning
- human immunodeficiency virus
- artificial intelligence
- antiretroviral therapy