Alternative provision of public health care: the role of citizens' satisfaction with public services and the social responsibility of government

Health Economics, Policy, and Law
N CohenE Vigoda-Gadot

Abstract

This paper explores the factors that influence citizens' attitudes toward the alternative provision of health care services, leading them to be willing to make extra, informal payments within the public health care system. We question whether these attitudes depend primarily on inherent normative preferences, such as beliefs about the government's responsibility to its citizens, or on certain aspects of the reality that they experience, such as satisfaction with the quality and quantity of services as well as the fairness of public systems. Analyzing the findings from a national survey, the paper shows that practical considerations and real-world conditions strongly relate to attitudes more than normative perceptions do.

References

Apr 28, 2006·Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law·Peter GaalMiklós Szócska
Mar 10, 2007·Journal of Clinical Epidemiology·John P A Ioannidis
Jul 17, 2007·Health Affairs·Mehtap TatarPeter Berman
May 11, 2011·Health Economics, Policy, and Law·Nissim Cohen
May 22, 2013·Health Economics, Policy, and Law·Vladimir S GordeevWim Groot
Jul 19, 2015·Patient Education and Counseling·Gillie Gabay
Aug 1, 2015·The International Journal of Health Planning and Management·Nissim Cohen, Dani Filc
Jul 1, 2016·Israel Journal of Health Policy Research·Giora Kaplan, Orna Baron-Epel
Dec 2, 2017·Israel Journal of Health Policy Research·Liza MonasDavid Chinitz

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