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100+ Healthcare Economics and Organisations Practice MCQs €5,96
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100+ Healthcare Economics and Organisations Practice MCQs

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Module by module practice multiple-choice questions for the exam.

Voorbeeld 4 van de 21  pagina's

  • 9 januari 2025
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  • 2024/2025
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Healthcare Economics and Organizations
Practice Multiple-Choice Questions
(with answers)

Module 1: Decision-Making in Healthcare and Insurance Markets
1. What does scarcity in health economics refer to?
A. Limited insurance coverage for high-cost treatments
B. The inability to produce enough medical professionals
C. Resources available are less than required for all desired activities
D. High costs associated with medical equipment

Answer: C

2. Opportunity cost is defined as:
A. The financial cost of healthcare services
B. The benefit forgone by not choosing an alternative action
C. The profit made by healthcare providers
D. The loss incurred due to inefficiency in healthcare

Answer: B

3. What is the main goal of efficiency in healthcare?
A. Minimizing patient dissatisfaction
B. Reducing the cost of care
C. Maximizing health outcomes with given resources
D. Providing equal access to all patients

Answer: C

4. Which of the following describes equity in healthcare?
A. Reducing social disparities in health and healthcare access
B. Maximizing profits for healthcare providers
C. Ensuring everyone receives identical treatment
D. Allocating resources based on market demand

Answer: A

5. What is a fundamental assumption about consumer behavior in healthcare markets?
A. Consumers are perfectly informed about service quality
B. Consumers never face budget restrictions
C. Consumers prioritize convenience over cost
D. Consumers lack preferences for specific goods

Answer: A

,6. Firms in healthcare markets aim to maximize:
A. Patient satisfaction
B. Profit
C. Access to healthcare
D. Public health outcomes

Answer: B

7. Externalities in healthcare occur when:
A. Patients misuse insurance benefits
B. Healthcare providers offer unnecessary treatments
C. Insurance companies raise premiums
D. One person's actions affect another without compensation

Answer: D

8. What is a positive externality in healthcare?
A. Increased hospital revenue
B. A vaccinated individual reducing disease spread in the community
C. Higher insurance premiums
D. Greater demand for pharmaceutical products

Answer: B

9. What is moral hazard in the context of healthcare?
A. Patients hiding health conditions from insurers
B. Providers charging extra for unnecessary services
C. A party taking unobservable actions that benefit them after an agreement
D. Consumers failing to compare healthcare plans

Answer: C

10. Adverse selection typically occurs due to:
A. Asymmetric information before a transaction
B. Excessive government regulation
C. Insufficient healthcare infrastructure
D. Overutilization of healthcare services

Answer: A

11. What does the Rothschild-Stiglitz Model analyze?
A. The impact of healthcare policies on equity
B. The instability caused by adverse selection in insurance markets
C. The efficiency of healthcare delivery systems
D. The distribution of healthcare costs across demographics

Answer: B

12. What type of insurance equilibrium involves high-risk and low-risk individuals
sharing the same premium?

, A. Separating equilibrium
B. Pooling equilibrium
C. Risk-adjusted equilibrium
D. Cost-minimized equilibrium

Answer: B

13. Under capitation payment systems, healthcare providers:
A. Receive a fixed payment per patient over a specific period
B. Earn based on the number of services provided
C. Are reimbursed for each medication prescribed
D. Share profits with insurance companies

Answer: A

14. Which bias occurs when people judge the likelihood of events based on familiar
patterns?
A. Availability bias
B. Anchoring bias
C. Representativeness bias
D. Framing bias

Answer: C

15. According to Prospect Theory, people are typically:
A. Risk-averse for gains and risk-seeking for losses
B. Risk-neutral in all scenarios
C. Always risk-seeking, regardless of context
D. Unaffected by the framing of outcomes

Answer: A

16. What does nudging in healthcare decision-making aim to achieve?
A. Force patients to choose specific treatments
B. Promote equity in healthcare distribution
C. Limit patients' options for simplicity
D. Guide choices through subtle presentation changes

Answer: D

17. A purely retrospective reimbursement system is also known as:
A. Capitation payment
B. Fee-for-service
C. Diagnosis-related group payment
D. Pay-for-performance

Answer: B

18. Which payment method reduces supplier-induced demand most effectively?
A. Retrospective reimbursement

, B. Fee-for-service
C. Blended reimbursement
D. Capitation

Answer: D

19. How can framing affect decision-making in healthcare?
A. It improves access to high-quality care
B. It alters perceptions of outcomes as gains or losses
C. It guarantees unbiased medical advice
D. It eliminates externalities

Answer: B

20. What is the primary focus of the invisible hand in markets?
A. Balancing supply and demand without regulation
B. Ensuring equitable healthcare distribution
C. Controlling moral hazards in insurance
D. Promoting transparency in pricing

Answer: A




Module 2a: Economic Evaluations in Healthcare
1. What is the primary reason for using economic evaluation in healthcare?
A. To maximize profits for healthcare providers
B. To ensure ethical considerations in treatments
C. To prioritize and allocate scarce resources effectively
D. To increase the cost of medical treatments

Answer: C

2. Which of the following is a type of full economic evaluation?
A. Cost-minimization analysis (CMA)
B. Cost-consequence analysis (CCA)
C. Cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA)
D. Incremental cost analysis

Answer: C

3. Cost-utility analysis (CUA) measures health outcomes in terms of:
A. Monetary value
B. Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs)
C. Disease incidence rates
D. Treatment satisfaction scores

Answer: B

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