School of Finance, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, Guangzhou, China.
Front Public Health. 2022 Feb 7;9:798780. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.798780. eCollection 2021.
By matching air quality index (AQI) data with the household data from China Family Panel Studies (CFPS), we identify the impact of air pollution on household medical expenses from a micro perspective. The results show that higher air pollution will increase household medical expenses and change household consumption structure. This effect is still significant after controlling for cities' relevant household and individual characteristics and economic characteristics. Under different educational backgrounds, income, hukou, gender, and other conditions, air pollution will significantly reduce medical spending. For those females in the urban areas with higher education backgrounds and higher income, the spending elasticity of air pollution is more significant than other corresponding groups. And air pollution will promote medical expenses through stronger individuals' environmental awareness, poor health conditions, bad emotional status, and positive risk aversion. Furthermore, we find that the impact of air pollution on healthcare spending remains significant after instrumental variables regression and geographical regression based on the Qinling Mountains-Huaihe River Line.
通过将空气质量指数(AQI)数据与中国家庭追踪调查(CFPS)中的家庭数据相匹配,我们从微观角度确定了空气污染对家庭医疗费用的影响。结果表明,较高的空气污染水平将增加家庭医疗费用并改变家庭消费结构。在控制了城市相关家庭和个人特征以及经济特征后,这种影响仍然显著。在不同的教育背景、收入、户口、性别等条件下,空气污染将显著降低医疗支出。对于城市地区具有较高教育背景和较高收入的女性而言,空气污染的支出弹性比其他相应群体更为显著。空气污染还会通过增强个人的环境意识、较差的健康状况、不良的情绪状态和积极的风险规避来促进医疗费用的增加。此外,我们发现,基于秦岭-淮河线的工具变量回归和地理回归后,空气污染对医疗保健支出的影响仍然显著。