Physician altruism and spending, hospital admissions, and emergency department visits
Physician altruism and spending, hospital admissions, and emergency department visits
JAMA Health Forum; Lawrence P. Casalino, MD, PhD; Shachar Kariv, PhD; Daniel Markovits, JD, DPhil; Raymond Fisman, PhD; 10/24
This cross-sectional study found that Medicare patients treated by altruistic physicians had fewer potentially preventable hospitalizations and emergency department visits and lower spending. Policymakers and leaders of hospitals, medical practices, and medical schools may want to consider creating incentives, organizational structures, and cultures that may increase, or at least do not decrease, physician altruism. Further research should seek to identify these and other modifiable factors, such as physician selection and training, that may shape physician altruism. Research could also analyze the relationship between altruism and quality and spending in additional medical practices, specialties, and countries, and use additional measures of quality and of patient experience.