Kalousova Lucie
Department of Sociology, University of Michigan and Department of Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan Department of Sociology, University of Michigan and Department of Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan
Health Policy Plan. 2015 May;30(4):423-31. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czu024. Epub 2014 Apr 30.
In 2008, the Czech Republic instituted a new policy that requires most patients to pay a small fee for some inpatient and outpatient healthcare services. Using the Survey of Health Aging and Retirement in Europe, this article examines the changes in healthcare utilization of Czechs 50 years and older following the new fee requirement by constructing difference-in-differences regression models focusing on four outcome measures: any visits to primary care physician, any hospitalization, number of visits to the primary care physician and number of nights hospitalized. For this population, I find that the likelihood of having any primary care visit decreased after the policy was instituted. The likelihood of reporting any hospitalization was not significantly changed. The predicted number of primary care visits per person declined, but the predicted number of nights spent in a hospital did not. I find only mixed evidence of greater effect of the user fees on some subpopulations compared with others. Those 65 or older reduced their use more than those between 50 and 64, and so did those who consider their health to be good, and the less educated.
2008年,捷克共和国制定了一项新政策,要求大多数患者为一些住院和门诊医疗服务支付少量费用。本文利用欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查,通过构建双重差分回归模型,关注四个结果指标,研究了新的费用要求实施后50岁及以上捷克人的医疗服务利用情况变化:是否去看初级保健医生、是否住院、看初级保健医生的次数以及住院天数。对于这一人群,我发现政策实施后去看初级保健医生的可能性降低了。报告住院的可能性没有显著变化。人均初级保健就诊次数预测值下降了,但住院天数预测值没有下降。我发现,与其他人群相比,使用费对某些亚人群的影响更大的证据并不一致。65岁及以上的人群比50至64岁的人群减少了更多的医疗服务使用,自认为健康状况良好的人群以及受教育程度较低的人群也是如此。