Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Health and Population "Lendület" Research Group, Hungary.
Harvard University, United States.
Health Policy. 2020 Mar;124(3):282-290. doi: 10.1016/j.healthpol.2020.01.006. Epub 2020 Jan 23.
Using administrative data on a random 50% of the Hungarian population, including individual-level information on incomes, healthcare spending, and mortality for the 2003-2011 period, we develop new evidence on the distribution of healthcare spending and mortality in Hungary by income and geography. By linking detailed administrative data on employment, income, and geographic location with measures of healthcare spending and mortality we are able to provide a more complete picture than the existing literature which has relied on survey data. We compute mean spending and 5-year and 8-year mortality measures by geography and income quantiles, and also present gender and age adjusted results. We document four patterns: (i) substantial geographic heterogeneity in healthcare spending; (ii) positive association between labor income and public healthcare spending; (iii) geographic variation in the strength of the association between labor income and healthcare spending; and (iv) negative association between labor income and mortality. In further exploratory analysis, we find no statistically significant correlation between simple county-level supply measures and healthcare spending. We argue that taken together, these patterns suggest that individuals with higher labor income are in better health but consume more healthcare because they have better access to services. Our work suggests new directions for research on the relationship between health inequalities and healthcare spending inequalities and the role of subtler barriers to healthcare access.
利用匈牙利总人口的 50%的随机行政数据,包括 2003-2011 年期间个人收入、医疗支出和死亡率的信息,我们根据收入和地理位置,为匈牙利的医疗支出和死亡率分布提供了新的证据。通过将就业、收入和地理位置的详细行政数据与医疗支出和死亡率的衡量标准相联系,我们能够提供比现有文献更完整的画面,现有文献依赖于调查数据。我们按地理位置和收入分位数计算了平均支出和 5 年及 8 年的死亡率衡量标准,并提供了性别和年龄调整的结果。我们记录了四个模式:(i)医疗支出存在大量地域差异;(ii)劳动力收入与公共医疗支出之间存在正相关关系;(iii)劳动力收入与医疗支出之间关联的地域差异;(iv)劳动力收入与死亡率之间存在负相关关系。在进一步的探索性分析中,我们没有发现县级供应措施与医疗支出之间存在统计学上的显著相关性。我们认为,综上所述,这些模式表明,收入较高的个人健康状况较好,但由于获得服务的机会更好,因此会消耗更多的医疗保健。我们的工作为健康不平等与医疗支出不平等之间的关系以及更微妙的医疗保健获取障碍的作用的研究提出了新的方向。