4.6 Article

Do the rich grow richer? An empirical analysis of the Matthew effect in an online healthcare community

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Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.elerap.2022.101125

Keywords

Word of mouth; Online health communities; Doctor ratings; Matthew effect

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. First Class Discipline of Zhejiang - A (Zhejiang University of Finance and Economics-Statistics)
  3. [11801502]

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This study investigates the impact of online doctor ratings on doctors' income. The results show a significant positive relationship between online doctor ratings and doctors' online income, and this relationship remains stable even when the sorting influence of the ratings is controlled. Furthermore, the effect of online ratings on doctors' income is stronger for doctors affiliated with higher-level hospitals, who receive more thank-you letters and votes from patients, and who have a higher level of academic and clinical titles.
Online doctor ratings have become a critical information source for patients' medical consultation decision support. Although there have been heated discussions about the pros and cons of online doctor ratings, the existing empirical literature remains largely unclear as to whether such ratings would influence the operating mechanism of online health communities. Guided by the Matthew effect, this study investigates whether doctors with higher ratings earn more platform income compared with those with lower ratings. To answer this question, we gathered a seven-month panel dataset comprising data from 5,670 doctors from a large online Chinese healthcare portal. By adopting a panel data model analysis method and multiple robustness checks, we find that online doctor ratings have a significantly positive relationship with doctors' online income composed of consultation fees and patient remuneration. Moreover, this relationship remains stable when the sorting influence of the ratings is controlled. Furthermore, the effect of online ratings on doctors' income is stronger for doctors who are affiliated with higher-level hospitals, receive more thank-you letters and votes from patients, and have a higher level of academic and clinical titles. These results demonstrate that platform resources are tilted toward high-quality doctors due to the online rating mechanism in healthcare. Our findings therefore present important theoretical and practical contributions.

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