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Centre for Public Health in Economics and Business
Faculty of Economics and Business
Centre for Public Health in Economics and Business

Public Health seminar with dr. Bastian Ravesteijn

When:Th 31-05-2018 15:00 - 16:45
Where:Duisenberg Building - room 5412.0028, Nettelbosje 2, Groningen (Zernike Campus)

On Thursday May 31, dr. Bastian Ravesteijn (Harvard Medical School and Paris Descartes University) will be visiting us at the Faculty of Economics and Business to talk about his latest research on the impact of cost sharing for mental health care on health care use and labor market outcomes.

When and where
Date: 31 May 2018
Time: 15:30 - 16:45
Location: Duisenberg Building - room 5412.0028, Nettelbosje 2, Groningen (Zernike Campus)

Join us!
For more information or if you are interested to meet the speaker send an email to Raun van Ooijen: r.van.ooijen rug.nl

This seminar is organised by Centre of Expertise Healthwise, the signature area Public Health and the Aletta Jacobs School of Public Health.


About dr. Bastian Ravesteijn

Dr. Bastian Ravesteijn is a Research Fellow in the Department of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School and a postdoctoral research fellow at Paris Descartes University. He has obtained his PhD in Economics from the University of Amsterdam, in 2016.
 
The research fields of Ravesteijn are health economics, public economics, and applied econometrics. His current and previous research focuses on the costs of mental health care and the relation between occupation and health (inequality).

Read more:
> Go to Ravesteijn's website
> Download full CV


Abstract

The Impact of Cost Sharing for Mental Health Care on Health Care Use and Labor Market Outcomes

This paper investigates whether less generous insurance coverage for mental health care impacts economic productivity through reduced mental health treatment. We evaluate a health insurance reform in the Netherlands and use exogenous variation in the out-of-pocket price of treatment continuation, which depended on the exact date on which a patient began a prior treatment record before the reform was announced. We construct a dataset that links at the individual level administrative data on the mental health care claims records of all residents of the Netherlands to administrative data on employment. Our results indicate that the reduction in moral hazard under less generous insurance came at the expense of reductions in employment for certain subpopulations. Therefore, a well-targeted Pigouvian subsidy in the form of a lower out-of-pocket price for mental health care can be welfare-improving.

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