Weaver Marcia, Deolalikar Anil
Department of Health Services, University of Washington, 901 Boren Avenue, Suite 1100, Seattle, WA 98104, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2004 Jul;59(1):199-208. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2003.10.014.
Hospitals consume a large share of health resources in developing countries, but little is known about the efficiency of their scale and scope. The Ministry of Health of Vietnam and World Bank collected data in 1996 from the largest sample ever surveyed in a developing country. The sample included 654 out of 815 public hospitals, six categories of hospitals and a broad range of sizes. These data were used to estimate total variable cost as a function of multiple products, such as admissions and outpatient visits. We report results for two specifications: (1) estimates with a single variable for beds and (2) estimates with interaction terms for beds and the category of hospital. The coefficient estimates were used to calculate marginal costs, short-run returns to the variable factor, economies of scale, and economies of scope for each category of hospital. There were important differences across categories of hospitals. The measure of economies of scale was 1.09 for central general and 1.05 for central specialty hospitals with a mean of 516 and 226 beds, respectively, indicating roughly constant returns to scale. The measure was well below one for both provincial general and specialty hospitals with a mean of 357 and 192 beds, respectively, indicating large diseconomies of scale. The measure was 1.16 for district hospitals and 0.89 other ministry hospitals indicating modest economies and diseconomies of scale, respectively. There were large economies of scope for central and provincial general hospitals. We conclude that in a system of public hospitals in a developing country that followed an administrative structure, the variable cost function differed significantly across categories of hospitals. Economies of scale and scope depended on the category of the hospital in addition to the number of beds and volume of output.
在发展中国家,医院消耗了很大一部分卫生资源,但人们对其规模和范围的效率却知之甚少。越南卫生部和世界银行于1996年从一个发展中国家有史以来规模最大的样本中收集了数据。该样本包括815家公立医院中的654家,涵盖六类医院,规模各异。这些数据被用于估计作为多种产出(如住院人数和门诊量)函数的总可变成本。我们报告了两种规格的结果:(1)用床位单一变量进行估计;(2)用床位与医院类别交互项进行估计。系数估计值被用于计算每家医院的边际成本、可变要素的短期回报、规模经济和范围经济。不同类别的医院存在重要差异。中央综合医院的规模经济衡量值为1.09,中央专科医院为1.05,平均床位分别为516张和226张,表明规模回报大致不变。省级综合医院和专科医院的该衡量值均远低于1,平均床位分别为357张和192张,表明存在较大的规模不经济。地区医院的该衡量值为1.16,其他部委医院为0.89,分别表明适度的规模经济和规模不经济。中央和省级综合医院存在较大的范围经济。我们得出结论,在一个遵循行政结构的发展中国家公立医院体系中,可变成本函数在不同类别医院之间存在显著差异。规模经济和范围经济除了取决于床位数和产出量外,还取决于医院类别。