Publications (17) View all
-
Article: Regulation and competition in the Taiwanese pharmaceutical market under national health insurance.
Ya-Ming Liu, Yea-Huei Kao Yang, Chee-Ruey Hsieh[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: This article investigates the determinants of the prices of pharmaceuticals and their impact on the demand for prescription drugs in the context of Taiwan's pharmaceutical market where medical providers earn profit directly from prescribing and dispensing drugs. Based on product-level data, we find evidence that the profit-seeking behavior of the medical providers in the prescription drug market transfers the force of competition from the unregulated wholesale market to the regulated retail market and hence market competition still plays an important role in the determination of the regulated price. We also find that the profit-seeking behavior plays a similar role to advertising in that it increases the brand loyalty and hence lowers price elasticity. An important implication of our study is that the institutional features in the pharmaceutical market matter in shaping the nature of pharmaceutical competition and the responsiveness of pharmaceutical consumption with respect to changes in price.Journal of Health Economics 03/2012; 31(3):471-83. · 2.34 Impact Factor -
SourceAvailable from: uni-muenchen.de
Article: Endogenous technological change in medicine and its impact on healthcare costs: evidence from the pharmaceutical market in Taiwan.
Chee-Ruey Hsieh, Ya-Ming Liu, Chia-Lin Chang[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Although the technological change in medicine has been recognized widely as the major driver of rising healthcare costs, there is very little research that estimates this effect directly. This paper uses both a single-equation and a simultaneous equations approach to investigate empirically the interactive relationship between technological innovation and the growth of health expenditure in the context of the pharmaceutical market in Taiwan. Based on observing 182 therapeutic groups between 1997 and 2006, we find evidence to support the argument that technological innovation and health expenditure are determined simultaneously as technological innovation, and that the growth of health expenditure are endogenous rather than exogenous. Specifically, we find that therapeutic groups associated with higher pharmaceutical expenditure are likely to attract more new products to the market. Meanwhile, therapeutic groups with more new products are associated with higher pharmaceutical expenditures. An important implication of the paper is that cost containment policies will affect not only the growth of health expenditure, but also the progress of technological innovation in the health sector.The European Journal of Health Economics 12/2011; · 1.50 Impact Factor -
SourceAvailable from: cufe.edu.cn
Article: National Health Insurance and Generic Competition in the Pharmaceutical Market: Evidence from Taiwan
Ya-Ming Liu, Chee-Ruey Hsieh05/2011; -
Article: New drugs and the growth of health expenditure: evidence from diabetic patients in Taiwan.
Ya-Ming Liu, Chee-Ruey Hsieh[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: This paper contributes to the growing body of literature that debates whether the adoption of pharmaceutical innovation increases the overall expenditure on health care. By examining data obtained from Taiwan and focusing on diabetic patients, we use a new class of drugs, namely, thiazolidinediones, as an example to investigate the effect on health expenditure of prescribing new drugs to patients by focusing on the impact of treatment substitution and treatment expansion. Overall, our results indicate that the introduction of new drugs mainly impacts the outpatient drug expenditure and does not give rise to any offsetting effect on other outpatient and inpatient health expenditures. This suggests that the adoption of pharmaceutical innovation in treating diabetic patients is expenditure-increasing. In addition, we find evidence that the treatment substitution channel has a more significant impact on the level of health expenditure than the treatment expansion channel. An important policy implication for our finding is that the justification for increasing health expenditure on the treatment of diabetes is not conditional upon a lowering in the demand for other types of health-care services. By contrast, it is conditional upon the increased health benefits per se.Health Economics 03/2011; 21(5):496-513. · 2.12 Impact Factor -
Article: The determinants of the adoption of pharmaceutical innovation: evidence from Taiwan.
Ya-Ming Liu, Yea-Huei Kao Yang, Chee-Ruey Hsieh[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: In recent years, a substantial amount of technological progress in medicine has taken the form of pharmaceutical innovation. This paper uses the launch of a series of new drugs designed for treating type 2 diabetic patients as an example to investigate the determinants that affect the diffusion of new medical technology. Based on prescription-level data that are obtained from the national health insurance program in Taiwan, we find that the probability of prescribing new drugs declines as more competing products enter the pharmaceutical market. Meanwhile, physicians are less likely to prescribe new drugs to treat their patients as the provider market becomes less concentrated. These results suggest that the providers' incentives for cost reduction dominate incentives for quality improvement as markets become more competitive and hence an increase in market competition is associated with a decrease in the diffusion of new drugs. As a result, access to new drugs is not uniform among patients in a country with universal coverage for prescription drugs. An important implication of our study is that profit-seeking behavior among providers can become an access barrier to new medical technology.Social Science [?] Medicine 02/2011; 72(6):919-27. · 2.70 Impact Factor