HUBER Helene

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Affiliations
  • 2005 - 2006
    Université Paris Nanterre
  • 2017
  • 2014
  • 2006
  • What place for economic calculation as a regulatory tool in health care? The introduction of the efficiency criterion in the regulation of reimbursable drug prices in France.

    Veronique RAIMOND, Lise ROCHAIX, Jean michel JOSSELIN, Catherine LE GALES, Lise ROCHAIX, Jean michel JOSSELIN, Catherine RUMEAU PICHON, Luc BAUMSTARK, Helene HUBER, Jerome WITTWER, Sandy TUBEUF
    2017
    The French legislator integrated the efficiency criterion into the determination of the price of reimbursable drugs in 2012. The efficiency of drugs must be documented for products likely to provide a significant therapeutic benefit and to have a significant impact on health insurance expenditure. It aims to measure the marginal health gain produced by an intervention, compared to the cost and effectiveness of another substitutable intervention. The thesis is based on an empirical analysis of the delegation relationships at work in the regulation of drugs, with a view to their access to reimbursement and the setting of their price in France. It is based on an analysis of three applications of efficiency assessment, reflecting a progressive deepening of the economic evaluation of health care interventions in three distinct institutional contexts. Their comparison allows us to identify the issues raised by the implementation of regulation, the factors of its effectiveness and the associated risks with regard to the theoretical framework of the theory of incentives by asking the following questions: 1) Does the information produced by the economic calculation expose the decision-maker to a risk of manipulation of the tool? 2) Is the contribution of the economic calculation improved in a constrained process of evaluation? 3) Can complementary approaches enrich the economic evaluation and improve its use by revealing other determinants of the health decision? The work in this thesis highlights the contribution of the efficiency criterion to improving the information available to decision-makers. The real risk of regulatory capture can be limited by a more transparent evaluation process and by clarifying the issues at stake in the decision and the objectives of the regulation.
  • Social Representations of Taxes and Intentions Toward Compliance.

    David MOESCHLER, Jean louis TAVANI, Helene HUBER, Todd i. LUBART
    2014
    This economics and psychology study proposes to search and determine some psychological factors which could predict different behaviors toward taxes. through the intention of compliance, avoidance and evasion.
  • Social Representations of Taxes and Intentions Toward Compliance.

    David MOESCHLER, Jean louis TAVANI, Helene HUBER, Todd i. LUBART
    2014
    This economics and psychology study proposes to search and determine some psychological factors which could predict different behaviors toward taxes. through the intention of compliance, avoidance and evasion.
  • Aging, health care spending and inequalities in health care utilization: essays in applied microeconometrics.

    Helene HUBER, Brigitte DORMONT
    2006
    The purpose of this thesis is to analyze health care consumption behaviors and their impact on the evolution and distribution of health care expenditures in the population. We conduct an analysis on individual data and use original microsimulation methods in order to highlight the effects of heterogeneity of behavior at the individual level. The first chapter presents the econometric methods used to estimate explanatory equations of health care consumption on individual data. A second chapter develops an original method to analyze the factors of the increase in health care expenditure, and shows that this increase is mainly due to changes in health care behavior, and very little to demographic aging. A third chapter proposes an innovative method of decomposing inequalities in health care consumption by factor. We show that half of the observed inequity is due to heterogeneity in behavior, which is not identifiable in standard decompositions.
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