• Soz Praventivmed · Jan 2004

    Patient willingness to pay for preventive measures in primary care: a study of five GPs in a German community.

    • Armin Wiesemann, Uwe Mueller-Buehl, Reginald Scheidt, Wolfgang Boehme, and Wolfgang Scheuermann.
    • Department of General Practice and Health Service Research, University of Heidelberg. armin.wiesemann@t-online.de
    • Soz Praventivmed. 2004 Jan 1; 49 (4): 254-60.

    ObjectiveTo explore the willingness of patients in a usual primary care setting to pay out-of-pocket fees for their own health promotion, in correlation with risk factors and net income, and compared to patients of an educational programme.MethodsA standardised health survey carried out in five general practices (GPs) of a small community with a special GP-based health education programme was combined with a questionnaire to explore the special attitudes of patients from a practice sample (n = 973) and from educational courses (n = 202): covering, in addition to cardiovascular risk factors, the sociodemographic factors, net income, and out-of-pocket fees that could be spent for own health promotion.ResultsAfter attending an educational programme, the patient's willingness to spend 15-40 euros/month for their own health promotion was high but there was no correlation with the income (p < 0.56), in contradiction to the patients of the practice sample who would pay more money the more they earn (p < 0.001). High levels of cardiovascular risk were associated with low education (p < 0.001), but net income and willingness to pay for preventive measures did not significantly correlate with cardiovascular risk factors.ConclusionParticipants of educational courses are willing to pay a rational out-of-pocket fee for preventive measures without correlation with their incomes, thus reducing the social gradient; future preventive measures should take into account that reasonable cost sharing is well accepted by well-informed patients.

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