Has China’s hierarchical medical system improved doctor-patient relationships?
Yang Gao, Yang Yang, Shoupeng Wang, Wenqian Zhang, Jiao Lu

TL;DR
This study examines how China's hierarchical medical system affects doctor-patient relationships, finding it improves them through better resource allocation and cost savings.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence on the impact of China's hierarchical medical policy on doctor-patient relationships using a difference-in-differences model.
Findings
Hierarchical medical treatment policies significantly improve doctor-patient relationships.
The policy's effect is stronger in cities with high healthcare spending and decreases with age.
Improved relationships result from better resource allocation and reduced medical costs.
Abstract
Developing harmonious doctor-patient relationships is a powerful way to promote the construction of a new pattern of medical reform in developing countries. We aim to analyze the effects of China’s hierarchical medical system on doctor-patient relationships, thus contributing to China’s medical and health system reform. With panel data on prefectural-level cities in China from 2012 to 2019, we used a time-varying difference-in-differences model to evaluate the effect of hierarchical medical treatment policy. Hierarchical medical treatment policies can significantly improve doctor-patient relationships, and this conclusion is supported by various robustness tests. And improving doctor-patient relationships can be indirectly realized by the optimization of resource allocation and saving of medical costs. In addition, the marginal effect of the pilot policy on doctor-patient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAgricultural and Food Production Studies
