01494pab a2200133 454500008004000000100002300040245012800063260000900191300001500200520107900215650001501294700002501309773002601334180718b2015 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aJensen, Ulrich Thy aPublic service motivation, user orientation, and prescription behaviour: doing good for society or for the individual user? c2015 ap.753-768. aMotivation to benefit individual recipients of public services (user orientation) can conflict with classic public service motivation linked to the interest of a collective entity. When actions intended to increase the well-being of an individual user can harm societal interests, the two types of motivation have different behavioural implications, but we know far too little about these potential trade-offs. This study analyses the relationships between public service motivation, user orientation, and antibiotic prescriptions for 407 general medical practitioners in Denmark. Use of antibiotics has a positive effect on the individual patient and (especially broad-spectrum antibiotics) a negative effect on society due to resistant bacteria. Combining survey and administrative data, we find that public service motivation and user orientation indeed are differently associated with prescription behaviour. This implies that it can be important for behaviour whether a public service provider is primarily inclined to help the individual user or society. - Reproduced. aMotivation aAndersen, Lotte Bogh aPublic Administration