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The impact of the 2008/2009 financial crisis on specialist physician activity in Canada
Author(s) -
Lavergne M. Ruth,
Hedden Lindsay,
Law Michael R.,
McGrail Kim,
Ahuja Megan,
Barer Morris
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
health economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.55
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1099-1050
pISSN - 1057-9230
DOI - 10.1002/hec.3786
Subject(s) - payment , financial crisis , service (business) , population , natural experiment , finance , business , physician supply , population ageing , demographic economics , medicine , demography , economics , environmental health , pathology , marketing , sociology , macroeconomics
Abstract Fee‐for‐service physicians are responsible for planning for their retirements, and there is no mandated retirement age. Changes in financial markets may influence how long they remain in practice and how much they choose to work. The 2008 crisis provides a natural experiment to analyze elasticity in physician service supply in response to dramatic financial market changes. We examined quarterly fee‐for‐service data for specialist physicians over the period from 1999/2000 to 2013/2014 in Canada. We used segmented regression to estimate changes in the number of physicians receiving payments, per‐physician service counts, and per‐physician payments following the 2008 financial crisis and explored whether patterns differed by physician age. The number of specialist physicians increased more rapidly in the period since 2008 than in earlier years, but increases were largest within the youngest age group, and we observed no evidence of delayed retirement among older physicians. Where changes in service volume and payments were observed, they occurred across all ages and not immediately following the 2008 financial crisis. We conclude that any response to the financial crisis was small compared with demographic shifts in the physician population and changes in payments per service over the same time period.

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