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David Chan, Senior Fellow

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This story is part of the Why Econ? series. Our affiliated students and faculty share why econ matters to them, their work, and our world.

Why Econ: David Chan, Faculty Fellow

Being a doctor and caring for patients, one-by-one, is a rewarding career. But what if your profession can improve the lives of many people, all at once?

That humanistic challenge is what inspired David Chan to take a hiatus from medical school to get a master鈥檚 in health policy 鈥 and a master鈥檚 and a PhD in economics 鈥 before completing his MD. And it鈥檚 what motivates him today as he juggles being an economist, doctor, and professor.

鈥淭he thing that appealed to me about economics is how you can help large groups of people as opposed to just the person in front of you,鈥 Chan says from his office at 九色社区 Health Policy, a short walk from SIEPR where he is a senior fellow.

鈥淓conomics is fundamentally about people 鈥 the fact that people drive things, and we are designing policies to make the welfare of people better. That鈥檚 also something that we share in medicine 鈥 the business of helping people.鈥

No surprise 鈥 Chan is a health economist. And he is amid a growing group of economists developing groundbreaking insights into the delivery of health care.

鈥淲e know so much about the financing of health care from decades of research, but there's just a dearth of research in the delivery of it,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd now that we have a wealth of new data to start studying this, we can open the black box and literally ask why some hospitals spend less but have much better outcomes. We can really see what people are doing inside these hospitals.鈥

Chan鈥檚 research projects, for example, have found how emergency room doctors are more likely to quickly order costly tests when they鈥檙e about to end their shifts, and that the typical practice of relying on triage nurses to assign patients to ER doctors is far less effective than doctor-managed assignments.

In another study, Chan found significant cost differences between pneumonia cases handled by lower-skilled versus higher-skilled radiologists. The findings suggests more uniform policies for training.

鈥淭he currency of moving policy forward is increasingly going to be in the hands of those who can make recommendations based on data and analytics, and economics is definitely a field that has kept pace with that,鈥 he says.

In 2023, the American Society of Health Economists awarded Chan the prestigious ASHEcon Medal for his significant contributions to health economics research.

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