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Scientific article DEC 2023
  • Management and implementation
  • Health Care
  • Management and implementation, Health Care

Patient and peer: Guideline design and expert response

Authors:

  • Jane Greve
  • Søren Rud Kristensen
  • Nis Lydiksen
  • Management and implementation
  • Health Care
  • Management and implementation, Health Care
Staged photo: Ricky John Molloy/VIVE
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  • Jane Greve

    Professor MSO, Cand. polit., PhD. in Economics

    +45 41 10 26 22
    jagr@vive.dk
We examine how patients’ medical expertise influences adherence to clinical guidelines for a treatment that is common, costly, and rationed by the clinical guidelines. Using administrative data on prenatal diagnostic testing (PDT), we compare the testing rates of medically trained patients (experts) and non-medically trained patients (non-experts) on the margin of eligibility thresholds in clinical guidelines. We find that experts are 9 percentage points more likely to receive PDT than non-experts when they are not eligible for testing and that more than 80% of the difference can be attributed to medical expertise. Our results suggest that the design of clinical guidelines is important for adherence and that having medical expertise as a patient affects treatment, when there is room for a deviation from the guideline.

Authors

  • Jane GreveSøren Rud KristensenNis Lydiksen

About this publication

  • Financed by

    Novo Nordisk Fonden
  • Collaborators

    Syddansk Universitet
  • Published in

    Journal of Health Economics
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