Abstract

Health check is essential in medical diagnostic procedures, so double-check becomes common if patients have physical examination/blood tests in one hospital but transfer to another hospital in the next period. To save patients’ costs, blockchain-based health information exchange for differentiated service is advocated but competing hospitals usually have incentive conflicts, especially those private hospitals who are most concerned with profitability. In this paper, we develop a two-period model where two private hospitals compete in both service quality and service charges. We formulate their tradeoffs towards health information exchange and find that interestingly, the two hospitals achieve incentive alignment when their profit loss in health check fee is significant and the service competition is intensified. We identify two driving forces, namely, the quality improvement effect and the price compensation effect, to interpret the rationality of the hospitals’ preferences of health information exchange.

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