775 results on '"medical expenditure"'
Search Results
2. Trends in health care expenditures and incremental health care cost in adults with atrial fibrillation in the United States
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Serpa, Frans, Tale, Archana, Zimetbaum, Peter J., and Kramer, Daniel B.
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- 2025
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3. Do social assistance programs alleviate rural households’ energy poverty? evidence from China’s basic medical insurance scheme
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Zhang, Dongling, Liu, Yan, and Li, Zhonghuang
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- 2024
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4. Impact of diabetes on medical costs in the pre- and postoperative year of lower extremity amputations in Belgium
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Dumont, Isabelle, Felix, Patricia, Matricali, Giovanni, Lauwers, Patrick, Hendriks, Jeroen M.H., Wouters, Kristien, Vanoverloop, Johan, Avalosse, Hervé, Dirinck, Eveline, and Nobels, Frank
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- 2024
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5. The association between health literacy, private health insurance, and medical expenditure in South Korea.
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Lee, Jeehye, Min, Hye Sook, and Ryu, Dong-Hee
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Background: Health literacy (HL) is crucial for effective healthcare utilization, but its relationship with private health insurance (PHI) enrollment and medical expenditure in South Korea remains unexplored. Objectives: This study aimed to examine the associations between HL, PHI enrollment, and annual out-of-pocket (OOP) medical expenditure in South Korea's universal healthcare system. Methods: Using data from the 2021 Korea Health Panel Study, we analyzed 5,469 participants aged 19–65. Logistic and multinomial logistic regression models were employed to assess factors influencing PHI enrollment. A Gamma GLM with a log- link function was used to examine the relationship between HL, PHI status, and OOP medical expenditure. Results: Among participants, 70.05% had indemnity insurance coverage, and 88.02% held at least one PHI policy. Individuals with sufficient HL showed higher indemnity insurance enrollment (71.47%) compared to those with inadequate HL (63.17%). In unadjusted analyses, those with sufficient HL were more likely to have indemnity insurance (OR = 1.46, 95% CI: 1.19–1.80) and PHI policies. However, after adjusting for sociodemographic and health-related factors, these associations became non-significant. Individuals with indemnity insurance spent 36% more on OOP medical expenditure compared to those without (p < 0.01), and OOP medical expenditure increased with the number of insurance policies (39.1%, 71.6%, and 107.5% higher for one, two, and three or more policies, respectively, all p < 0.01). Those with sufficient HL spent 18.9% less on OOP medical expenditure compared to those with inadequate HL (p < 0.01). However, after adjusting for other variables, the coefficients lost statistical significance. After adjusting for other variables, higher education levels were associated with lower OOP medical expenditure. Conclusions: While HL initially showed an association with PHI enrollment and reduced OOP medical expenditure, these relationships became non-significant after adjusting for socioeconomic and health-related factors. Higher education levels were associated with lower OOP medical expenditure, suggesting that educational attainment may better explain the observed HL effects. The positive association between PHI and OOP medical expenditure highlights the need for policy attention to ensure sustainable healthcare financing and appropriate medical service utilization in Korea's healthcare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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6. Impact of diagnosis-related group payment on medical expenditure and treatment efficiency on people with drug-resistant tuberculosis: a quasi-experimental study design.
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Xiong, Yingbei, Yao, Yifan, Li, Yuehua, Chen, Shanquan, Li, Yunfei, Lin, Kunhe, and Xiang, Li
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DIAGNOSIS related groups , *RESEARCH funding , *HOSPITAL care , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *TREATMENT duration , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MATHEMATICAL models , *THEORY , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: The severe health challenge and financial burden of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) continues to be an impediment in China and worldwide. This study aimed to explore the impact of Diagnosis-related group (DRG) payment on medical expenditure and treatment efficiency among DR-TB patients. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included all DR-TB patients from the digitized Hospital Information System (HIS) of Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital and the TB Information Management System (TBIMS) with completed full course of National Tuberculosis Program (NTP) standard treatment in Wuhan from January 2016 to December 2022, excluding patients whose treatment spanned both before and after the DRG timepoint. These patients are all receiving standardized treatment specified by the NTP in designated tuberculosis hospitals. We performed the difference-in-differences (DID) model to investigate 6 primary outcomes. The cost-shifting behaviors were also examined using 4 outpatient and out-of-pocket (OOP) indicators. In the DID model, the baseline period is set from January 2016 to December 2020 before the DRG payment reform, while the treatment period is from January 2021 to December 2022. The payment reform only applied to individuals covered by Wuhan Municipal Medical Insurance, so the treatment group consists of patients insured by this plan, with other patients serving as the control group. Results: In this study, 279 patients were included in the analysis, their average treatment duration was 692.79 days. We found the DRG payment implementation could effectively reduce the total medical expenditure, total inpatient expenditure, and inpatient expenditure per hospitalization by 28636.03RMB (P < 0.01), 22035.03 RMB (P < 0.01) and 2448.00 RMB (P < 0.05). We also found a reduction in inpatient frequency and inpatient length of stays per hospitalization by 1.32 and 2.63 days with significance. The spillover effects of the DRG payment on outpatient and OOP expenditure were statistically insignificant. Conclusions: The DRG payment method can effectively control the increase of DR-TB patients' medical expenditure and improve treatment efficiency with the guarantee of care quality. Furthermore, there was no evidence of spillover effects of DRG payment on outpatient and out-of-pocket expenditures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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7. Relationship between oral hypofunction and medical expenditure in older adults in Japan
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Takatoshi Hiroshimaya, Yoshiaki Kawagoe, Kazuto Fukuhara, Hiroshi Ijichi, and Naofumi Tamaki
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Oral hypofunction ,Oral frailty ,Medical expenditure ,Oral health ,Frailty ,Gerontology ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract This study aimed to analyze the impact of poor oral function on medical expenditures among older adults. We diagnosed oral hypofunction based on dental data obtained from oral health examinations and examined its association with several annual medical expenditures. Compared to individuals without oral hypofunction, those with oral hypofunction incurred higher total, outpatient medical, inpatient medical, dental, dispensing medical, and lifestyle-related medical expenditures. Those with high medical expenditure costs were significantly more likely than those without to be 80 years old, male, with oral hypofunction, poor oral hygiene, xerostomia, poor lip closure, physical frailty, mental frailty, and subjective poor health. Logistic regression analysis indicated that oral hypofunction was significantly associated with total medical, inpatient medical, dental outpatient, dispensing medical, and lifestyle-related medical expenditures, compared to those without oral hypofunction (p
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- 2025
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8. A measurement study of the environmental quality and medical expenditures of elderly individuals: causal inference based on machine learning
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Yu Zhang, Sheng Chen, and Dewen Liu
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Environmental quality ,Medical expenditure ,Entropy weights-TOPSIS method ,Generalized random forests ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The global surge of environmental pollution exacerbates health issues, disease incidence, and economic strain. In China, the increasing healthcare costs of the elderly population necessitate addressing this challenge as part of the “Healthy China” strategy. We explore the impact of environmental quality on elderly healthcare expenses. Methods This study devised a comprehensive environmental quality index for 30 Chinese provinces, excluding Tibet, which was correlated with medical expenses for individuals older than 60 years, using China Family Panel Studies (CFPS) data. Because the traditional econometric model cannot solve the endogeneity problem and the selection of instrumental variables is subjective, a new machine learning algorithm is adopted based on the traditional ordinary least squares (OLS) model and the fixed effect model to conduct causal analysis to ensure the reliability of the results. Finally, heterogeneity analysis was conducted based on the generalized random forest algorithm. Results Southern provinces such as Jiangxi and Guangxi exhibited superior environmental qualities. A regional analysis revealed a gradient where environmental quality decreased from west to east and from south to north. Both conventional and machine learning methodologies underscored a pivotal finding: enhanced environmental qualities significantly curtail elderly healthcare expenses. A heterogeneity assessment revealed that such improvements predominantly benefit elderly people in the eastern and central regions, with marginal impacts in the west. For different groups, the improvement of environmental quality can significantly reduce the medical expenditure of people aged 60 to 75, with bedtime hours between 9 and 11 PM and a lower household income. Conclusions This study, employing machine learning and traditional models, demonstrates that enhancements in environmental quality significantly reduce medical costs for the elderly in China, especially in the eastern and central regions, and among demographics such as individuals aged 60–75 and low-income households. These findings underscore the potential of environmental policies to lower medical costs within the “Healthy China” initiative framework. However, the study’s scope is limited by the environmental quality index and the extent of data coverage, indicating a need for further research expansion.
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- 2024
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9. Association between physician–hospital integration and inpatient care delivery in accountable care organizations: An instrumental variable analysis.
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Lin, Meng‐Yun, Hanchate, Amresh D., Frakt, Austin B., Burgess, James F., and Carey, Kathleen
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ACCOUNTABLE care organizations , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *INPATIENT care , *PRIMARY care , *INSURANCE - Abstract
Objective: To investigate the relationship between physician–hospital integration within accountable care organizations (ACOs) and inpatient care utilization and expenditure. Data Sources: The primary data were Massachusetts All‐Payer Claims Database (2009–2013). Study Setting: Fifteen provider organizations that entered a commercial ACO contract with a major private payer in Massachusetts between 2009 and 2013. Study Design: Using an instrumental variable approach, the study compared inpatient care delivery between patients of ACOs demonstrating high versus low integration. We measured physician–hospital integration within ACOs by the proportion of primary care physicians in an ACO who billed for outpatient services with a place‐of‐service code indicating employment or practice ownership by a hospital. The study sample comprised non‐elderly adults who had continuous insurance coverage and were attributed to one of the 15 ACOs. Outcomes of interest included total medical expenditure during an episode of inpatient care, length of stay (LOS) of the index hospitalization, and 30‐day readmission. An inpatient episode was defined as 30, 45, and 60 days from the admission date. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: Not applicable. Principal Findings: The study examined 33,535 admissions from patients served by the 15 ACOs. Average medical expenditure within 30 days of admission was $24,601, within 45 days was $26,447, and within 60 days was $28,043. Average LOS was 3.5 days, and 5.4% of patients were readmitted within 30 days. Physician–hospital integration was associated with a 10.6% reduction in 30‐day expenditure (95% CI, −15.1% to −5.9%). Corresponding estimates for 45 and 60 days were − 9.7% (95%CI, −14.2% to −4.9%) and − 9.6% (95%CI, −14.3% to −4.7%). Integration was associated with a 15.7% decrease in LOS (95%CI, −22.6% to −8.2%) but unrelated to 30‐day readmission rate. Conclusions: Our instrumental variable analysis shows physician–hospital integration with ACOs was associated with reduced inpatient spending and LOS, with no evidence of elevated readmission rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Impact of the First-Wave COVID-19 Pandemic on Medical Expenditure for Older Adults in China: Lessons from a Natural Experiment.
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Hu, Xiyuan, Yuan, Dianqi, Zeng, Yuyu, and Guo, Chao
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HEALTH services accessibility , *INTERNET access , *RESEARCH funding , *SEX distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH methodology , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *COVID-19 pandemic , *MEDICAL care costs , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Older adults' access to healthcare services may have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. This study explored the effect of the first wave pandemic on the medical expenditure of older adults in China. Difference-in-Difference models captured both temporal and geographical variation in COVID-19 exposure to estimate the impacts of the pandemic on medical expenditure through a quasi-natural experiment. Data derived from the China Family Panel Studies. Results indicate that exposure to the pandemic significantly decreased total medical expenditures, hospital expenditures, and non-hospital medical expenditures of Chinese older adults by 15% (95% CI 12%–17%), 5% (95% CI 2%–7%), and 15% (95% CI 13%–16%), respectively, for each standardized severity increment. Females, less well-educated people, and individuals without internet access were most susceptible to experiencing these reductions. This study revealed that COVID-19 exerted a detrimental influence on the medical expenditure of older adults in mainland China. The "hidden epidemic" of non-COVID-19 medical needs of older adults deserves more attention on the part of policymakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Effect of long-term care insurance on medical expenditure and health status: National cohort study
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Shanshan Yin, Wen Chen, Changli Jia, Yifan Yao, and Lan Yao
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LTCI ,Medical expenditure ,Health status ,Value-based healthcare ,China ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Long-term care insurance (LTCI) was implemented in China to solve the elderly care problems caused by the aging population. It is crucial to evaluate the effectiveness of LTCI implementation from the perspective of value-based healthcare. Objective This study aimed to investigate the impact of LTCI on medical care expenditure and health status in China. Methods We used staggered difference-in-differences (DID) analysis to analyze the effect of LTCI policy on medical expenditure and health status based on China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study data from 2011 to 2018. Results Our findings confirmed the positive contribution of LTCI policies to medical expenditures and health status. We found that the implementation of LTCI significantly reduced inpatient and outpatient expenditure, scores of self-report of health, and CESD scores by 26.3%, 12.3%, 0.103, and 0.538, respectively. It also decreased ADL scores, but the decrease was not significant. The impact of LTCI on reducing inpatient expenditure was greater for individuals aged between 65 and 80 and those residing in urban areas and eastern cities. In terms of outpatient costs, the effect of LTCI was more pronounced among median and high-income people and people living in central and eastern cities. The impact of LTCI on self-report of health is stronger for rural populations, individuals under 80, and those in central and eastern cities. For ADL scores, LTCI affected those aged 65–80 the most. About the CESD scores, LTCI had a greater impact on rural populations, people aged 45–65, median income groups, and those in eastern cities. Conclusions Our study underscored LTCI’s effectiveness in curbing medical expenditures and enhancing health status, offering valuable insights for future LTCI development in China and beyond. Accelerating the development of LTCI is conducive to improving the quality of life of the disabled elderly, enhancing the well-being of people’s livelihoods, and realizing the goal of value-based healthcare.
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- 2024
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12. The Effects of the Multi-Hospital Global Budget Payment on Medical Expenditure and Service Volume: The Evidence from Dangyang County, China
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Lin K and Xiang L
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global budget payment ,multi-hospital ,medical expenditure ,service volume ,china ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Kunhe Lin,1 Li Xiang1,2 1Department of Health Management, School of Medicine and Health Management, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, People’s Republic of China; 2HUST Base of National Institute of Healthcare Security, Wuhan, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Li Xiang, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, People’s Republic of China, Email xllyf@hust.edu.cnBackground: Global budget payment is currently the prevailing payment strategy internationally. In China, the concept of multi-hospital global budget payment has been proposed with the aims of achieving cost control effects while also encouraging hospital collaboration and optimising allocation of healthcare resources. This study seeks to analyse the impact of multi-hospital global budget payment in China on healthcare expenditure and service volume.Materials and Methods: A retrospective comparative study was carried out in Dangyang County, China. The exposure cases were migrants who were not locally registered in the residence registration system. The study period encompassed January 1, 2017, to December 31, 2019. Including 3,246,164 outpatient medical records and 242,685 inpatient medical records. The key variables are medical expenditure and service volume indicators. Continuous variables were reported as mean and tested by t-test. We used interrupted time series analysis models to estimate the changes in the level and trend of each outcome measure after the policy.Results: After the outpatient global budget payment reform, the monthly medical expenditure of the hospital alliance has transitioned from a discernible upward trajectory to a deceleration in the rate of growth. The outpatient volume in public and private high-level hospitals decreased at a rate of − 419.26 person/month and − 137.04 person/month, respectively. In terms of inpatient service volume, only private high-level hospitals reported a decrease, with a reduction rate of − 15.38 individuals per month.Conclusion: This study presents new evidence demonstrating that the multi-hospital global budget payment can effectively control costs and promote resource reallocation when implemented jointly with hospital alliance policies. However, overly lenient budget caps risk counterproductive effects.Keywords: global budget payment, multi-hospital, medical expenditure, service volume, China
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- 2024
13. Effect of long-term care insurance on medical expenditure and health status: National cohort study.
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Yin, Shanshan, Chen, Wen, Jia, Changli, Yao, Yifan, and Yao, Lan
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RURAL population ,LONG-term care insurance ,QUALITY of life ,HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: Long-term care insurance (LTCI) was implemented in China to solve the elderly care problems caused by the aging population. It is crucial to evaluate the effectiveness of LTCI implementation from the perspective of value-based healthcare. Objective: This study aimed to investigate the impact of LTCI on medical care expenditure and health status in China. Methods: We used staggered difference-in-differences (DID) analysis to analyze the effect of LTCI policy on medical expenditure and health status based on China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study data from 2011 to 2018. Results: Our findings confirmed the positive contribution of LTCI policies to medical expenditures and health status. We found that the implementation of LTCI significantly reduced inpatient and outpatient expenditure, scores of self-report of health, and CESD scores by 26.3%, 12.3%, 0.103, and 0.538, respectively. It also decreased ADL scores, but the decrease was not significant. The impact of LTCI on reducing inpatient expenditure was greater for individuals aged between 65 and 80 and those residing in urban areas and eastern cities. In terms of outpatient costs, the effect of LTCI was more pronounced among median and high-income people and people living in central and eastern cities. The impact of LTCI on self-report of health is stronger for rural populations, individuals under 80, and those in central and eastern cities. For ADL scores, LTCI affected those aged 65–80 the most. About the CESD scores, LTCI had a greater impact on rural populations, people aged 45–65, median income groups, and those in eastern cities. Conclusions: Our study underscored LTCI's effectiveness in curbing medical expenditures and enhancing health status, offering valuable insights for future LTCI development in China and beyond. Accelerating the development of LTCI is conducive to improving the quality of life of the disabled elderly, enhancing the well-being of people's livelihoods, and realizing the goal of value-based healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. The Incidence, Mortality and Medical Expenditure in Patients with Asthma in Taiwan: Ten-year Nationwide Study.
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Liao, Kuang-Ming, Chen, Pei-Jun, Hung, Yu-Tung, Hsu, Tzu-Ju, Tsai, Fuu-Jen, and Shen, Te-Chun
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ASTHMATICS ,CHRONIC active hepatitis ,CONGESTIVE heart failure ,MEDICAL care costs ,ORAL medication - Abstract
Background: This study examines incidence, mortality, medical expenditure and prescription patterns for asthma on a national scale, particularly in Asian countries for asthma is limited. Our aim is to investigate incidence, mortality, prescription patterns and provide a comprehensive overview of healthcare utilization trends for asthma from 2009 to 2018. Methods: We included patients diagnosed with asthma between 2009 and 2018. We excluded patients with missing demographic data. Our analysis covered comorbidities, including diabetes mellitus, hypertension, allergic rhinitis, eczema, atopic dermatitis, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, chronic hepatitis, stroke, and cancer. Investigated medications comprised oral and intravenous steroids, short-acting beta-agonists, inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), combinations of ICS and long-acting beta-agonists, long-acting muscarinic antagonists, and leukotriene receptor antagonists montelukast. We also assessed the number of outpatient visits, emergency visits, and hospitalizations per year, as well as the average length of hospitalization and average medical costs. Results: The study included a final count of 88,244 subjects from 1,998,311 randomly selected samples between 2000 and 2019. Over the past decade, there was a gradual decline in newly diagnosed asthma patients per year, from 10,140 to 6,487. The mean age annually increased from 47.59 in 2009 to 53.41 in 2018. Over 55% of the patients were female. Eczema was diagnosed in over 55% of the patients. Around 90% of the patients used oral steroids, with a peak of 97.29% in 2018, while the usage of ICS varied between 86.20% and 91.75%. Intravenous steroids use rose from 40.94% in 2009 to 54.14% in 2018. The average annual hospital stay ranged from 9 to 12 days, with a maximum of 12.26 days in 2013. Lastly, the average medical expenses per year ranged from New Taiwan dollars 5558 to 7921. Conclusions: In summary, both asthma incidence and all-cause mortality rates decreased in Taiwan from 2009 to 2018. Further analysis of medical expenses in patients with asthma who required multiple hospitalizations annually revealed an increase in outpatient and emergency visits and hospitalizations, along with longer hospital stays and higher medical costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The crowding-out effect of physical fitness activities on medical expenditure in the aged group
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Tao Liu, Yujiao Yao, Zhandong Yang, Kaigeng Li, Tao Yu, and Yalong Xia
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physical activity ,healthy aging ,medical expenditure ,crowding-out effect ,tobit model ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionChina is facing the challenge of “deep aging”, and promoting healthy aging has become a key research topic. Both medical care and physical exercise are important for health, but while medical services focus on treating illness, physical fitness activities focus on prevention, making them a more effective approach for promoting healthy aging.MethodsThis study uses data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS), focusing on individuals aged 60 to 80, to investigate the relationship between physical fitness activities and medical expenditures. A Tobit model was employed to analyze the data.Results(1) Active participation in physical fitness activities significantly improves the health of older adults, making physical activity an essential pathway to achieve healthy aging. (2) Participation in sports and fitness activities leads to a crowding-out effect on medical expenditures, significantly reducing healthcare costs for participants. (3) High-intensity physical activities are most suitable for individuals aged 60-65, moderate-intensity activities for those aged 66-70, and low-intensity activities for those aged 71–80.Discussion(1) Policies should focus on raising awareness of physical fitness benefits among older adults, encouraging regular physical activity to improve health and reduce medical costs. (2) A shift from treatment to prevention in health management is needed, promoting exercise as a cost-effective way to reduce healthcare spending. (3) Age-specific fitness guidelines should be developed to provide tailored exercise recommendations for different older aldult age groups.
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- 2024
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16. The impact of an innovative payment method on medical expenditure, efficiency, and quality for inpatients with different types of medical insurance: evidence from a pilot city, China
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Kunhe Lin, Yunfei Li, Yifan Yao, Yingbei Xiong, and Li Xiang
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Innovative payment method ,Medical insurance ,Medical expenditure ,Medical efficiency ,Medical quality ,Health equity ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Since 2020, China has implemented an innovative payment method called Diagnosis-Intervention Packet (DIP) in 71 cities nationwide. This study aims to assess the impact of DIP on medical expenditure, efficiency, and quality for inpatients covered by the Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance (UEBMI) and Urban and Rural Residents Basic Medical Insurance (URRBMI). It seeks to explore whether there are differences in these effects among inpatients of the two insurance types, thereby further understanding its implications for health equity. Materials and methods We conducted interrupted time series analyses on outcome variables reflecting medical expenditure, efficiency, and quality for both UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients, based on a dataset comprising 621,125 inpatient reimbursement records spanning from June 2019 to June 2023 in City A. This dataset included 110,656 records for UEBMI inpatients and 510,469 records for URRBMI inpatients. Results After the reform, the average expenditure per hospital admission for UEBMI inpatients did not significantly differ but continued to follow an upward pattern. In contrast, for URRBMI inpatients, the trend shifted from increasing before the reform to decreasing after the reform, with a decline of 0.5%. The average length of stay for UEBMI showed no significant changes after the reform, whereas there was a noticeable downward trend in the average length of stay for URRBMI. The out-of-pocket expenditure (OOP) per hospital admission, 7-day all-cause readmission rate and 30-day all-cause readmission rate for both UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients showed a downward trend after the reform. Conclusion The DIP reform implemented different upper limits on budgets based on the type of medical insurance, leading to varying post-treatment prices for UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients within the same DIP group. After the DIP reform, the average expenditure per hospital admission and the average length of stay remained unchanged for UEBMI inpatients, whereas URRBMI inpatients experienced a decrease. This trend has sparked concerns about hospitals potentially favoring UEBMI inpatients. Encouragingly, both UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients have seen positive outcomes in terms of alleviating patient financial burdens and enhancing the quality of care.
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- 2024
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17. The Incidence, Mortality and Medical Expenditure in Patients with Asthma in Taiwan: Ten-year Nationwide Study
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Kuang-Ming Liao, Pei-Jun Chen, Yu-Tung Hung, Tzu-Ju Hsu, Fuu-Jen Tsai, and Te-Chun Shen
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Asthma ,Incidence ,Mortality ,Medical Expenditure ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background This study examines incidence, mortality, medical expenditure and prescription patterns for asthma on a national scale, particularly in Asian countries for asthma is limited. Our aim is to investigate incidence, mortality, prescription patterns and provide a comprehensive overview of healthcare utilization trends for asthma from 2009 to 2018. Methods We included patients diagnosed with asthma between 2009 and 2018. We excluded patients with missing demographic data. Our analysis covered comorbidities, including diabetes mellitus, hypertension, allergic rhinitis, eczema, atopic dermatitis, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, chronic hepatitis, stroke, and cancer. Investigated medications comprised oral and intravenous steroids, short-acting beta-agonists, inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), combinations of ICS and long-acting beta-agonists, long-acting muscarinic antagonists, and leukotriene receptor antagonists montelukast. We also assessed the number of outpatient visits, emergency visits, and hospitalizations per year, as well as the average length of hospitalization and average medical costs. Results The study included a final count of 88,244 subjects from 1,998,311 randomly selected samples between 2000 and 2019. Over the past decade, there was a gradual decline in newly diagnosed asthma patients per year, from 10,140 to 6,487. The mean age annually increased from 47.59 in 2009 to 53.41 in 2018. Over 55% of the patients were female. Eczema was diagnosed in over 55% of the patients. Around 90% of the patients used oral steroids, with a peak of 97.29% in 2018, while the usage of ICS varied between 86.20% and 91.75%. Intravenous steroids use rose from 40.94% in 2009 to 54.14% in 2018. The average annual hospital stay ranged from 9 to 12 days, with a maximum of 12.26 days in 2013. Lastly, the average medical expenses per year ranged from New Taiwan dollars 5558 to 7921. Conclusions In summary, both asthma incidence and all-cause mortality rates decreased in Taiwan from 2009 to 2018. Further analysis of medical expenses in patients with asthma who required multiple hospitalizations annually revealed an increase in outpatient and emergency visits and hospitalizations, along with longer hospital stays and higher medical costs.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The impact of an innovative payment method on medical expenditure, efficiency, and quality for inpatients with different types of medical insurance: evidence from a pilot city, China.
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Lin, Kunhe, Li, Yunfei, Yao, Yifan, Xiong, Yingbei, and Xiang, Li
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HEALTH insurance reimbursement ,MEDICAL quality control ,RESEARCH funding ,INSURANCE ,T-test (Statistics) ,HEALTH insurance ,EMPIRICAL research ,HOSPITAL patients ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH methodology ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: Since 2020, China has implemented an innovative payment method called Diagnosis-Intervention Packet (DIP) in 71 cities nationwide. This study aims to assess the impact of DIP on medical expenditure, efficiency, and quality for inpatients covered by the Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance (UEBMI) and Urban and Rural Residents Basic Medical Insurance (URRBMI). It seeks to explore whether there are differences in these effects among inpatients of the two insurance types, thereby further understanding its implications for health equity. Materials and methods: We conducted interrupted time series analyses on outcome variables reflecting medical expenditure, efficiency, and quality for both UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients, based on a dataset comprising 621,125 inpatient reimbursement records spanning from June 2019 to June 2023 in City A. This dataset included 110,656 records for UEBMI inpatients and 510,469 records for URRBMI inpatients. Results: After the reform, the average expenditure per hospital admission for UEBMI inpatients did not significantly differ but continued to follow an upward pattern. In contrast, for URRBMI inpatients, the trend shifted from increasing before the reform to decreasing after the reform, with a decline of 0.5%. The average length of stay for UEBMI showed no significant changes after the reform, whereas there was a noticeable downward trend in the average length of stay for URRBMI. The out-of-pocket expenditure (OOP) per hospital admission, 7-day all-cause readmission rate and 30-day all-cause readmission rate for both UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients showed a downward trend after the reform. Conclusion: The DIP reform implemented different upper limits on budgets based on the type of medical insurance, leading to varying post-treatment prices for UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients within the same DIP group. After the DIP reform, the average expenditure per hospital admission and the average length of stay remained unchanged for UEBMI inpatients, whereas URRBMI inpatients experienced a decrease. This trend has sparked concerns about hospitals potentially favoring UEBMI inpatients. Encouragingly, both UEBMI and URRBMI inpatients have seen positive outcomes in terms of alleviating patient financial burdens and enhancing the quality of care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Hunger or Illness? a trade-off on fertilizer use
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Hongshan Ai, Bo Fan, and Zhengqing Zhou
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Fertilizer ,Medical expenditure ,Rural China ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Although fertilizer can help alleviate hunger, it can also lead to disease. Using data from the National Fixed-Point Survey spanning from 1998 to 2017, we aimed to determine the impact of fertilizer use on healthcare costs. Our findings indicate that a ten percent increase in fertilizer use is responsible for a 0.63 percentage point rise in medical service fees, which translates to a staggering $678 million in medical expenses. Through an analysis of the various channels of pathogenic exposure, we discovered that food crops and drinking water are the primary sources of contamination. This implies that different rural environments, including fertilizer types, villages, terrain, and water sources, can exacerbate the negative effects of fertilizer use. Our research underscores the need for policymakers to consider compensating farmers who suffer from fertilizer pollution and incur health-related losses.
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- 2024
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20. Big Data-Enabled Analysis of Factors Affecting Medical Expenditure in the Cerebral Infarction of a Developing City in Western China
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Zeng S, Zhang Y, Guo C, Zhou X, and He X
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medical expenditure ,cerebral infarction ,influencing factors ,reimbursement mechanism ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Siyu Zeng,1 Ying Zhang,2 Chuijiang Guo,1 Xia Zhou,1 Xiaozhou He3 1School of Logistics, Chengdu University of Information Technology, Chengdu, Sichuan, People’s Republic of China; 2General Practice Ward, General Practice Medical Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, Sichuan, People’s Republic of China; 3Business School, Sichuan University, Chengdu, Sichuan, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Xiaozhou He, Business School, Sichuan University, No. 24 South Section 1, Yihuan Road, Chengdu, Sichuan, 610065, People’s Republic of China, Tel +86-18512811267, Email xiaozhouhe126@qq.comPurpose: Cerebral infarction (CI) has been one of the leading causes of death in China since 2017, and controlling the medical expenses of this disease is an urgent issue for the Chinese government. This study aims to explore the important factors that affect the hospitalization expenses of CI patients and to provide a scientific basis for establishing a reasonable reimbursement mechanism and hospitalization expense standard for CI patients.Methods: Data from 109,314 inpatients from the Healthcare Security Administration of Chengdu in western China from January 2016 to December 2018 were utilized. Descriptive statistical analysis was used for variable characteristic analysis. The Mann–Whitney test and Kruskal–Wallis test were used for single-factor analysis, and multiple linear stepwise regression was used for single-factor analysis and multiple-factor analysis.Results: This study found that the average direct economic burden of CI in Chengdu was approximately 10,569 Chinese yuan (CNY), about 1450 US dollars, the average length of stay (LOS) was 14.47 days, the indirect economic burden was approximately 2817 CNY, and the total economic burden was 13,386 CNY for a CI inpatient. Gender, insurance type, grade of medical institution, the level of payment type, age, LOS, and complications and comorbidities (CCs) are the most important factors affecting CI medical costs.Conclusion: Citizens should improve their lifestyle habits to reduce disease risk to avoid the associated medical and economic burdens. Hospitals should improve their medical technology to decrease the LOS and reduce direct medical costs. The government should actively promote the hierarchical diagnosis and treatment policy to reduce the waste of medical resources caused by low-acuity patients going to high-level hospitals for treatment. The National Healthcare Security Administration should optimize the medical insurance payment method and establish a corresponding mechanism to reduce the occurrence of excessive medical treatments such as overuse.Keywords: medical expenditure, cerebral infarction, influencing factors, reimbursement mechanism
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- 2023
21. Effects of private health insurance on medical expenditure and health service utilization in South Korea: a quantile regression analysis
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Kristine Namhee Kwon and Wankyo Chung
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Private health insurance ,Medical expenditure ,Moral hazard ,Quantile regression ,Quantile count regression ,Propensity score matching ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Despite universal health insurance, South Korea has seen a sharp increase in the number of people enrolled in supplemental private health insurance (PHI) during the last decade. This study examined how private health insurance enrollment affects medical expenditure and health service utilization. Methods Unbalanced panel data for adults aged 19 and older were constructed using the 2016–2018 Korea Health Panel Survey. Quantile regression for medical cost, and quantile count regression for health service utilization were utilized using propensity score-matched data. We included 17 variables representing demographic, socioeconomic, and health information, as well as medical costs and use of outpatient and inpatient care. Results We discovered that PHI enrollees’ socioeconomic and health status is more likely to be better than PHI non-enrollees’. Results showed that private health insurance had a greater effect on the lower quantiles of the conditional distribution of outpatient costs (coefficient 0.149 at the 10th quantile and 0.121 at the 25th quantile) and higher quantiles of inpaitent care utilization (coefficient 0.321 at the 90th quantile for days of hospitalization and 0.076 at the 90th quantile for number of inpatient visits). Conclusions PHI enrollment is positively correlated with outpatient costs and inpatient care utilization. Government policies should consider these heterogeneous distributional effects of private health insurance.
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- 2023
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22. Trajectory of medical expenditure and regional disparities in hypertensive patients in South Korea
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Gi-Hyun Kim, Ji-Soo Song, Ji-Woong Nam, Woo-Ri Lee, and Ki-Bong Yoo
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hypertension ,regional disparities ,medical expenditure ,trajectory ,inverse probability weighting (IPW) ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
The aim of this study is to understand how different regions influence the management and financial burden of hypertension, and to identify regional disparities in hypertension management and medical expenditure. The study utilized data from the Korean Health Panel Survey conducted between 2014 and 2018, focusing on individuals with hypertension. Medical expenditures were classified into three trajectory groups: “Persistent Low”, “Expenditure Increasing”, and “Persistent High” over a five-year period using trajectory analysis. Inverse Probability Weighting (IPW) analysis was then employed to identify the association between regions and medical expenditure trajectories. The results indicate that individuals residing in metropolitan cities (Busan, Daegu, Incheon, Gwangju, Daejeon, and Ulsan) (OR = 1.07; 95% CI: 1.03-1.12) and rural areas (OR = 1.07; 95% CI: 1.03-1.11) were more likely to belong to the “Expenditure Increasing” group compared to the “Persistent Low Expenditure” group, as opposed to those in the capital city (Seoul). Additionally, residents of rural areas (OR = 1.05; 95% CI: 1.01-1.08) were more likely to be in the “High Expenditure” group compared to the “Persistent Low Expenditure” group than those residing in the capital city. These findings suggest that individuals in rural areas may be receiving relatively inadequate management for hypertension, leading to higher medical expenditures compared to those in the capital region. These disparities signify health inequality and highlight the need for policy efforts to address regional imbalances in social structures and healthcare resource distribution to ensure equitable chronic disease management across different regions.
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- 2024
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23. 健康公平视角下的城乡居民医疗支出不平等研究 --基于生命周期模型.
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廖 朴, 刘金浩, and 冯 璐
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- 2024
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24. Effect of long-term care insurance on health condition, medical expenditure and family care of the urban elderly in China: a CHARLS data analysis
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Xiaoou MAN and Chao MA
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long-term care insurance ,health condition ,medical expenditure ,home care ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine the effect of long-term care insurance on health condition, medical expenditure and family care of urban elderly in China for providing evidence to the improvement of long-term care insurance system and health condition of elderly population. MethodsThe data on 2 278 urban residents aged 60 years and above were from three waves of China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) conducted in 2013, 2015, and 2018 across China. Of the urban elderly selected, 798 from 11 pilot cities of implementing long-term care insurance for elderly residents were assigned into a study group and 1 480 from non-pilot cities were regarded as the controls. Difference-in-differences (DID) method was adopted to analyze the effect of long-term care insurance on health condition, medical expenditure, family care of urban elderly and to assess the heterogeneity between the young-old and the older-old residents. Propensity score matching-difference-in-differences (PSM-DID) method was used in robustness test. ResultsCompared to those of the controls, significantly higher self-rated health score (2.92 ± 0.87 vs. 2.62 ± 0.95, P = 0.04 ) and lower Center of Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale-10 (CESD-10) score (9.93 ± 8.05 vs. 10.24 ± 7.08, P = 0.04) were observed in the study group, with a DID of 0.30 (P < 0.01) for self-rated health score and – 0.32 (P = 0.02) for mental health between the two groups, indicating a positive effect of long-term care insurance on the physical and mental health of the elderly; while, the monthly medical expenses of the study group was significantly higher than that of control group (449.08 ± 1024.42 vs. 220.43 ± 605.62 RMB yuan, P = 0.03). The elderly of the study group received significantly lower monthly number of days (3.47) or hours (41.47) of home-based care than those of the control group (both P < 0.05). Heterogeneity analysis results showed that long-term care insurance had a significant effect on the health condition of both the young-old and the older-old persons to a similar extent. The effect of long-term care insurance on monthly medical expense was significant only for the young-old elderly; the effect of long-term care insurance on monthly number of days or hours of home-based care was much stronger for the older-old persons. ConclusionIn general, long-term care insurance could improve the health condition and reduced the time of home-based care for urban elderly, but the role of reducing the actual medical expenses is limited.
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- 2023
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25. Geographic variation in inpatient medical expenditure among older adults aged 75 years and above in Japan: a three-level multilevel analysis of nationwide data
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Yuki Shirakura, Yugo Shobugawa, and Reiko Saito
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medical expenditure ,geographic variation ,regional disparities ,older adults ,population ageing ,multi-level analysis ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionIn Japan, a country at the forefront of population ageing, significant geographic variation has been observed in inpatient medical expenditures for older adults aged 75 and above (IMEP75), both at the small- and large-area levels. However, our understanding of how different levels of administrative (geographic) units contribute to the overall geographic disparities remains incomplete. Thus, this study aimed to assess the degree to which geographic variation in IMEP75 can be attributed to municipality-, secondary medical area (SMA)-, and prefecture-level characteristics, and identify key factors associated with IMEP75.MethodsUsing nationwide aggregate health insurance claims data of municipalities for the period of April 2018 to March 2019, we conducted a multilevel linear regression analysis with three levels: municipalities, SMA, and prefectures. The contribution of municipality-, SMA-, and prefecture-level correlates to the overall geographic variation in IMEP75 was evaluated using the proportional change in variance across six constructed models. The effects of individual factors on IMEP75 in the multilevel models were assessed by estimating beta coefficients with their 95% confidence intervals.ResultsWe analysed data of 1,888 municipalities, 344 SMAs, and 47 prefectures. The availability of healthcare resources at the SMA-level and broader regions to which prefectures belonged together explained 57.3% of the overall geographic variance in IMEP75, whereas the effects of factors influencing healthcare demands at the municipality-level were relatively minor, contributing an additional explanatory power of 2.5%. Factors related to long-term and end-of-life care needs and provision such as the proportion of older adults certified as needing long-term care, long-term care benefit expenditure per recipient, and the availability of hospital beds for psychiatric and chronic care and end-of-life care support at home were associated with IMEP75.ConclusionTo ameliorate the geographic variation in IMEP75 in Japan, the reallocation of healthcare resources across SMAs should be considered, and drivers of broader regional disparities need to be further explored. Moreover, healthcare systems for older adults must integrate an infrastructure of efficient long-term care and end-of-life care delivery outside hospitals to alleviate the burden on inpatient care.
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- 2024
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26. Effects of private health insurance on medical expenditure and health service utilization in South Korea: a quantile regression analysis.
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Kwon, Kristine Namhee and Chung, Wankyo
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HEALTH insurance ,QUANTILE regression ,REGRESSION analysis ,NATIONAL health insurance ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
Background: Despite universal health insurance, South Korea has seen a sharp increase in the number of people enrolled in supplemental private health insurance (PHI) during the last decade. This study examined how private health insurance enrollment affects medical expenditure and health service utilization. Methods: Unbalanced panel data for adults aged 19 and older were constructed using the 2016–2018 Korea Health Panel Survey. Quantile regression for medical cost, and quantile count regression for health service utilization were utilized using propensity score-matched data. We included 17 variables representing demographic, socioeconomic, and health information, as well as medical costs and use of outpatient and inpatient care. Results: We discovered that PHI enrollees' socioeconomic and health status is more likely to be better than PHI non-enrollees'. Results showed that private health insurance had a greater effect on the lower quantiles of the conditional distribution of outpatient costs (coefficient 0.149 at the 10th quantile and 0.121 at the 25th quantile) and higher quantiles of inpaitent care utilization (coefficient 0.321 at the 90th quantile for days of hospitalization and 0.076 at the 90th quantile for number of inpatient visits). Conclusions: PHI enrollment is positively correlated with outpatient costs and inpatient care utilization. Government policies should consider these heterogeneous distributional effects of private health insurance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. Quality of death among older adults in China: The role of medical expenditure and timely medical treatment.
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Gong, Xiuquan, Pei, Yaolin, Zhang, Min, and Wu, Bei
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MULTIPLE regression analysis , *MEDICAL care costs , *QUALITY of life , *EMERGENCY medical services , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *ATTITUDES toward death , *PAIN management , *PALLIATIVE treatment , *OLD age - Abstract
Medical expenses in the last year of life consume a large portion of healthcare expenditures, yet little is known about the relationship between medical expenditures in the last year of life and quality of death. Few empirical studies have investigated the association between timely medical treatment before dying and quality of death. This study aimed to examine the associations between medical expenditures in the last year of life, timely medical treatment before dying, and quality of death. Data derived from the Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey (CLHLS), the largest national representative study of the oldest-old in China. Results from multinomial logistic regression suggested that higher medical expenses in the last year of life and lack of timely medical treatment before dying are associated with lower quality of death. These findings highlight an urgent need for strengthening education on death and dying, developing hospice and palliative care services, and improving pain management at the end of life in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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28. Progressive supranuclear palsy's economical burden: the use and costs of healthcare resources in a large health provider in Israel.
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Barer, Yael, Cohen, Raanan, Grabarnik-John, Meital, Ye, Xiaolan, Zamudio, Jorge, Gurevich, Tanya, and Chodick, Gabriel
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PROGRESSIVE supranuclear palsy , *DISEASE progression , *MOVEMENT disorders , *NEURODEGENERATION , *AGE groups - Abstract
Background: Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a rare and fatal neurodegenerative movement disorder with no disease modifying therapy currently available. Data on the costs associated with PSP are scarce. This study aims to assess the direct medical expenditure of patients with PSP (PwPSP) throughout disease course. Methods: This retrospective cohort study is based on the data of a large state-mandated health provider in Israel. We identified PwPSP who were initially diagnosed between 2000 and 2017. Each PwPSP was randomly matched to three health-plan members without PSP by birth-year, sex, and socioeconomic status. Healthcare resources' utilization and related costs were assessed. Results: We identified 88 eligible PwPSP and 264 people in the reference group; mean age at diagnosis was 72.6 years (SD = 8.4) and 53.4% were female. The annual direct costs of PwPSP have risen over time, reaching US$ 21,637 in the fifth year and US$ 36,693 in the tenth year of follow-up vs US$ 8910 in the year prior diagnosis. Compared to people without PSP, PwPSP had substantially higher medical expenditure during the years prior- and post-index date. Conclusion: The present study demonstrates higher economic burden, which increases with time, in PwPSP as compared to those without. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. Relationships between the Physical Activity Intensity and the Medical Expenditure of Middle-Aged and Elderly People: Parsing from the CHARLS Database.
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Chen, Linhong and Xu, Xiaocang
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MIDDLE-aged persons , *PHYSICAL activity , *OLDER people , *DATABASES , *SQUARE dancing - Abstract
There are many studies on the impact of physical activity on health but few studies on the relationship between physical activity and medical expenditure among the elderly. Based on the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Survey (CHARLS) database and selected 4456 valid samples, this paper used a two-part model to analyze the effects of high, moderate, and low physical activity intensity on medical expenditure. It is found that the intensity of physical activity was negatively correlated with medical expenditure, and the medical expenditure of the high physical activity intensity group was significantly lower than that of the low physical activity intensity group. For example, compared to people with no physical activity, the total medical expenditure decreased by 22.4%, 40.4%, and 62.5% per week in those with low, moderate, and high physical activity intensity. Thus, the government should provide more places for the elderly to exercise, planning special exercise areas for the elderly in community playgrounds, such as a dancing square, which will also help the elderly to increase their amount of exercise per week and develop a daily exercise habit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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30. Cross-sectional study of food insecurity and medical expenditures by race and ethnicity.
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Lee, Wei-Chen, Lin, Sherry, Yang, Tse-Chuan, and Serag, Hani
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DISEASE risk factors , *STATISTICS , *FOOD security , *CROSS-sectional method , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *ONE-way analysis of variance , *MEDICAL care costs , *RACE , *RISK assessment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SURVEYS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HEALTH equity , *DATA analysis software , *DATA analysis ,MORTALITY risk factors - Abstract
Food insecurity is a risk factor for morbidity and mortality leading to high medical expenditures, but race/ethnicity was used as adjustments in the literature. The study sought to use race/ethnicity as a key predictor to compare racial differences in associations between food insecurity and expenditures of seven health services among non-institutionalized adults. This cross-sectional study used Medical Expenditure Panel Survey that collects information on food insecurity in 2016 (n=24,179) and 2017 (n=22,539). We examined the association between race/ethnicity and food insecurity status and documented the extent to which impacts of food insecurity on medical expenditures varied by race/ethnicity. We fit multivariable models for each racial group, adjusting for states, age, gender, insurance, and education. Adults older than 18 years were included. The results show that blacks experienced an inter-racial disparity in food insecurity whereas Hispanics experienced intra-racial disparity. A higher percentage of blacks (28.7%) reported at least one type of food insecurity (11.2% of whites). Around 20% of blacks reported being worried about running out of food and the corresponding number is 8.4% among whites. Hispanics reported more food insecurity issues than whites. Moreover, food insecurity is positively associated with expenditures on emergency room utilization (99% increase for other races vs. 51% increase for whites) but is negatively associated with dental care utilization (43% decrease for blacks and 44% for whites). Except for Hispanics, prescription expenditure has the most positive association with food insecurity, and food insecure blacks are the only group that did not significantly use home health. The study expanded our understanding of food insecurity by investigating how it affected seven types of medical expenditures for each of four racial populations. An interdisciplinary effort is needed to enhance the food supply for minorities. Policy interventions to address intra-racial disparities among Hispanics and inter-racial disparities among African Americans are imperative to close the gap. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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31. Assessing the effect of health status on multidimensional poverty among older adults: the Chinese longitudinal healthy longevity survey
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Lulin Zhou, Change Zhu, Christine A. Walsh, and Xinjie Zhang
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multidimensional health ,multidimensional poverty ,older adults ,medical expenditure ,China ,CLHLS ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundThis study aimed to explore the association between health status (physical, mental, and self-rated health) and multidimensional poverty (subjective and objective poverty) in older adults.MethodA panel binary logit regression approach was applied to four waves of CLHLS data (2008, 2011, 2014, and 2018). In total,1,445 individuals were included after data cleaning.ResultsThe mean values and proportion of physical, mental, and self-rated health were 5.73 (87.42%), 0.93 (93.06%), and 3.46 (86.7%), respectively, and mean values and proportion of subjective and objective poverty were 0.19 (18.51%) and 0.21(21.4%). In addition, physical, mental, and self-rated health were all found to be associated with subjective poverty among older adults (r = −0.181, r = −0.630, r = −0.321, p
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- 2023
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32. Health shock, the Green for Grain Program and medical expenses: Empirical Evidence on the well-being of Chinese Farmers.
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Lei, Quanyong, Qi, Chunjie, Ye, Cong, and Fang, Guozhu
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WELL-being ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH literacy ,PROPENSITY score matching ,CORE competencies ,PANEL analysis ,BALANCED scorecard - Abstract
Health shock is an important factor affecting the medical expenditure of farmers. As the largest environmental compensation project in China, the Green for Grain Program plays an important role in increasing the well-being of farmers. Based on the 2017–2019 China Household Finance Survey (CHFS) dataset, this paper constructs two balanced panel data, which adopts the differences-in-differences propensity score matching (PSM-DID) from the perspective of post-hoc. The method identified the effect of health shock on the level of household medical expenditure in peasant household. The findings suggest that health shock have significantly increased the level of medical expenditure in peasant household, and this conclusion remains true after a series of robustness tests. Specifically, the health impact can significantly increase household medical expenditure by 2270 RMB yuan. Further research found that the impact is significantly heterogeneous due to whether farmers participate in the Green for Grain Program. Specifically, under the impact of health shock, the increased amount of medical expenditure of farmers participating in the Green for Grain Program is relatively small, that is, there is a "well-being paradox" phenomenon. Therefore, this paper puts forward suggestions on improving the level of farmers' health literacy, optimizing the compensation policy for the Green for Grain Program and developing the service industry policy in the areas where the Green for Grain Program is implemented. This study has certain policy guidance and reference value for the Chinese government to continue to consolidate the results of the Green for Grain Program to alleviate poverty and improve the well-being of farmers in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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33. AN EFFECTIVE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM THROUGH HEALTH TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT AND AN EVIDENCE BASED PAYMENT SYSTEM IN INDIA.
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Kumar, Arya, Mathur, Rajni, Shirmila, T., More, Rahul, Kaikini, Ravindra, and Bhalerao, Kuldeep
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TECHNOLOGY assessment ,MEDICAL technology ,PAYMENT systems ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care costs - Abstract
The purpose of this research is to discuss the significance of health care insurance compensation for obtaining comprehensive medical treatment in India. Through a systematic review survey focusi ng on the keywords like out-ofpocket, health technology assessment and health care system was conducted by searching Google Scholar, Science Direct, PubMed and ProQuest Database. It is observed that India ranks among the greatest out-of-pocket (OOP) healthcare expenditure across the globe. This seems to be notwithstanding the deployment of several public health plans and the provision of a significant variety of both private and public health coverage schemes. Decrease in the treatment quality across many healthcare institutions of government is a key cause causing the typical Indian individual to constantly rely on medical services provided by private firms, heading up OOP expenses. Among the most significant problems in implementing universal health care (UHC) in India is a poor acceptance of insurance products and awareness between many Indians. The burden of large OOP expenditures on people might be lessened by increasing medical insurance acceptance, which may be accomplished by enhancing India's medical claims system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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34. Do elections make you sick? Evidence from first‐time voters.
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Chang, Hung‐Hao and Meyerhoefer, Chad D.
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Elections permit the continuance of democracy and enable economic development, but may have unintended effects on health. By applying a two‐part model with regression discontinuity design to administrative health care claims, we determine that elections increased health care use during legally specified campaign periods by as much as 19% for first‐time voters. Contrary to earlier studies focusing on mental health, we find higher spending on the treatment of physical health conditions, such as acute respiratory infections, gastrointestinal conditions and injuries. Levels of medical spending during campaign periods were highest in rural areas and among low‐to‐middle‐income men. Using data on campaign spending from local elections, we identify campaign rallies as one important mechanism for the transmission of disease. Our findings provide additional rationale for policies that limit campaign spending on the grounds that it is socially wasteful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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35. Equality in the water: How does water ecological civilization city policy enhance inclusive development in China?
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Zhao, Congyu, Kong, Lingqiang, Zhong, Chao, and Ying, Na
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WORK environment , *CITIES & towns , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *HUMAN capital - Abstract
This paper constructs an index system to measure the level of inclusive development in China's 283 cities during 2005–2021, and then empirically examines the spatial impact of water ecological civilization city policy, an environmental regulation policy, on inclusive development, based on the spatial difference-in-differences approach. This study offers some fresh insights with the following research findings. First, water ecological civilization city policy plays a positive role in stimulating inclusive development not only in pilot cities locally, but also in surrounding cities due to the spatial spillover effect. Moreover, the spatial spillover effects attenuate as the distance thresholds expand. Second, the heterogeneous impact of water ecological civilization city policy on inclusive development is confirmed, which is more effective in cities with lower population density, lower Engel coefficient, and that are resource-based. Third, water ecological civilization city policy directly promotes inclusive development by accelerating affluence, harmony, and sustainability, which are three pillars of inclusive development. Fourth, this paper also figures out two mediators between the nexus of water ecological civilization city policy and inclusive development, namely residential medical expenditure and human capital, which successfully advanced the current academic findings regarding the negative role of environmental pollution in people's living health and work conditions. • This paper examines the direct and spillover effect of water ecological civilization city policy on inclusive development. • The policy effectively promotes inclusive development in both local and surrounding cities. • Policy effect is stronger in low population density, low Engel coefficient, and resource-based cities. • The policy plays a vital role in enhancing affluence, harmony, and sustainability. • Residential medical expenditure and human capital are two effective mediators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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36. Medical expenditure for strabismus: a hospital-based retrospective survey
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Lei Yang, Yiduo Min, Zhiyan Jia, Yupeng Wang, Rihui Zhang, and Bitong Sun
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Strabismus ,Surgery ,Medical expenditure ,China ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background and aims The misconception of the purpose of strabismus treatment has, on the one hand, affected the motivation of strabismus patients to seek care and, on the other hand, has resulted in strabismus not being covered by health insurance, both of which interact to limit the motivation of strabismus patients and also impose a financial burden on strabismus patients. Previous studies on the cost of strabismus had only addressed the cost utility and functional and psychosocial benefits of strabismus surgery. The aim of this study was to estimate the direct medical expenditure incurred for strabismus surgery and analyze the trend for the period 2014–2019 using the data collected by local eye hospitals in northeast China. Methods This study was based on 6-year strabismus medical expenditure data collected from the eye hospital of the first affiliated hospital of Harbin medical university, covering 3596 strabismus patients who had strabismus surgery. All medical expenditure data were adjusted to 2014 using China’s annual consumer price index to remove the effects of inflation. Results The average direct medical expenditure for strabismus cares (in 2014) was 5309.6 CNY (US$870.4), and the annual growth rates from 2015 to 2019 (compared with the previous year) were 9.3, 7.7, 21.7, 14.5, and 4.3%, respectively. Surgical expenses accounted for the highest proportion (33.1%) of the total medical expenses followed by examinations expenses (19.7%) and medical consumables expenses (18.7%). The regression coefficient for general anaesthesia was 1804.5 and age was less than 0. Conclusion The average direct medical expenditure for strabismus increases year by year, and the growth rate is rapid. Anesthesia was the most important factor increasing medical cost, and age was negatively correlated with cost.
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- 2022
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37. Residents' Health Effect of Environmental Regulations in Coal-Dependent Industries: Empirical Evidence from China's Cement Industry.
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Jia, Xiaojing and Luo, Xin
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Coal-dependent industries are the economic pillar of many countries; however, their contribution to air pollution also restricts long-term economic development. While the negative effects of environmental regulations on coal-dependent industries has attracted much attention, the health effects of such regulations remains barely quantitatively studied. Our study is based on a quasi-natural experiment created by a command-and-control policy in China's cement industry, whereby cement enterprises are forced to stop production for a specific period of time every year. This paper adopted DID methods and found that direct pollution control measures for coal-dependent industries could significantly improve residents' health levels and that the resultant reduction in medical expenditures could save 456.8 RMB yuan per capita per year. Additionally, our mechanism analysis found that the COPP is beneficial to residents' health in that it reduces air pollution and sewage treatment rates. This means that pollution from coal-dependent industries has a large and underestimated impact on residents' health. Environmental regulation of the coal-dependent industry could greatly improve the health of residents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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38. Influence of public hospital reform on public health: Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment in China
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Bingnan Guo, Weizhe Feng, Huilin Cai, and Ji Lin
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public hospital reform ,public health ,medical expenditure ,DID ,the mediating effect ,China ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Public health is an important symbol of national wealth and prosperity. At present, China's public health is hindered by the poor management of public hospitals, which impacts the demographic structure and socioeconomic development. Therefore, taking the implementation of public hospital reform in China as a quasi-natural experiment, this study employed the time-varying DID model and the mediating effect to evaluate the influence of public hospital reform on public health. The results were as follows: (1) Public hospital reform can significantly improve public health, and a series of robustness tests have also confirmed the effects; (2) Government's financial support is a transmission mechanism for public hospital reform to promote public health; (3) After taking control variables into consideration, the effect of public hospital reform is stronger in the western region with a poorer economy. This research provides a vital policy reference for promoting the scope of reform and improving the health of the general public.
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- 2023
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39. Does self-medication reduce medical expenditure among the middle-aged and elderly population? A four-wave longitudinal study in China
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Zehao Zheng, Zhanchun Feng, Donglan Zhang, Xiaobo Sun, Dong Dong, Youxi Luo, and Da Feng
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self-medication ,medical expenditure ,middle-aged and elderly population ,longitudinal study ,two-part mixed-effect model ,China ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionSelf-medication has a high prevalence in the middle-aged and elderly population in China. Despite the published evidence demonstrating the economic benefits of self-medication, limited research has addressed the relationship between self-medication and individual medical expenditures, especially within the Chinese population. This study examined the effect of self-medication on individual medical expenditures in China and analyzed the heterogeneity between outpatient and inpatient cases.MethodsWe conducted a panel data analysis using data from four waves of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). Two-part mixed-effect models were implemented to estimate the effect of self-medication on total outpatient and inpatient expenses and out-of-pocket (OOP) costs, where mixed-effects logit regression was used as the first part, and generalized linear mixed models with log link and gamma distribution was used as the second part.ResultsWe identified 72,041 responses representing 24,641 individuals, of which 13,185 responses incurred outpatient expenses and 9,003 responses incurred inpatient costs. Controlling for all covariates, we found that self-medication behaviors were significantly associated with a higher probability of outpatient service utilization (OR = 1.250, 95% CI = 0.179 to 0.269; P < 0.001), but displayed no significant association with outpatient expenses. Respondents who had taken self-medication were less likely to use inpatient services (OR = 0.865, 95% CI = −0.201 to −0.089; P < 0.001), and their inpatient expenses were significantly reduced by 9.4% (P < 0.001). Inpatient OOP costs were significantly reduced by 10.7% (P < 0.001), and outpatient OOP costs were significantly increased by 11.3% (P < 0.001) among respondents who had self-medicated.ConclusionsThis study allowed us to identify the economic value of self-medication among the middle-aged and elderly population in China. Future work should guide the middle-aged and elderly to take responsible self-medication to reduce their economic burden.
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- 2023
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40. Patient Routing to Skilled Nursing Facilities: The Consequences of the Medicare Reimbursement Rule.
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Jin, Ginger Zhe, Lee, Ajin, and Lu, Susan Feng
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MEDICARE reimbursement ,NURSING care facilities ,PATIENT readmissions ,MEDICARE costs ,MEDICARE beneficiaries ,NURSING home residents ,RATINGS of hospitals - Abstract
Medicare does not pay for a skilled nursing facility (SNF) unless a fee-for-service patient has stayed in the hospital for at least three days. This Medicare reimbursement rule, or the "three-day rule," provides full coverage for the first 20 days and partial coverage for days 21–100 for skilled nursing care provided at any Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services-approved SNF. In this paper, we study how this Medicare reimbursement rule affects patient routing to SNFs and whether an SNF discharge reduces patients' 30-day hospital readmission rates. Data analysis shows that Medicare patients are more likely to be discharged to an SNF rather than home after the three-day cutoff, and SNF discharges increase hospital readmission rates for Medicare day 3 patients. This perverse effect is driven by infection-related readmissions and is more likely to occur when local SNFs have lower occupancy rates and higher deficiency citations than the median SNF of the same state-year. Back-of-the-envelope calculation suggests that the three-day rule may have generated an extra Medicare cost of $71 million to $345 million per year due to the overuse of SNFs and the subsequent rise in hospital readmissions. Replacing the three-day rule with a machine-learning algorithm mimicking private insurers would help. This paper was accepted by Stefan Scholtes, healthcare management. Supplemental Material: The online appendix and data are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.4316. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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41. Medical expenditure for lung cancer in China: a multicenter, hospital-based retrospective survey
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Xin Zhang, Ju-Fang Shi, Guo-Xiang Liu, Jian-Song Ren, Lan-Wei Guo, Wei-Dong Huang, Lin-Mei Shi, Yi Ma, Hui-Yao Huang, Ya-Na Bai, Xian-Zhen Liao, A-Yan Mao, Xiao-Jie Sun, Xin-Yu Zhu, Qi Zhou, Ji-Yong Gong, Jin-Yi Zhou, Yu-Qin Liu, Ling Mai, Bing-Bing Song, Lin Zhu, Xiao-Jing Xing, Ling-Bin Du, Xiao Qi, Xiao-Hua Sun, Shou-Ling Wu, Ying Ren, Rong Cao, Li Lan, Pei-An Lou, Kai Zhang, Jie He, and Min Dai
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Lung cancer ,Medical expenditure ,Cost ,China ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Lung cancer is the most prevalent cancer, and the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in China. The aim of this study was to estimate the direct medical expenditure incurred for lung cancer care and analyze the trend therein for the period 2002–2011 using nationally representative data in China Methods This study was based on 10-year, multicenter retrospective expenditure data collected from hospital records, covering 15,437 lung cancer patients from 13 provinces diagnosed during the period 2002–2011. All expenditure data were adjusted to 2011 to eliminate the effects of inflation using China’s annual consumer price index. Results The direct medical expenditure for lung cancer care (in 2011) was 39,015 CNY (US$6,041) per case, with an annual growth rate of 7.55% from 2002 to 2011. Drug costs were the highest proportionally in the total medical expenditure (54.27%), followed by treatment expenditure (14.32%) and surgical expenditure (8.10%). Medical expenditures for the disease varied based on region, hospital level, type, and stage. Conclusion The medical expenditure for lung cancer care is substantial in China. Drug costs and laboratory test are the main factors increasing medical costs.
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- 2021
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42. Deregulation and pricing of medical services: a policy experiment based in China
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Wenbin Zang, Mei Zhou, and Shaoyang Zhao
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Price regulation ,Private hospitals ,Information advantage ,Medical expenditure ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Price regulation is a common constraint in Chinese hospitals. Based on a policy experiment conducted in China on the price deregulation of private nonprofit hospitals, this study empirically examines the impact of medical service price regulation on the pricing of medical services by hospitals. Methods Using the claim data of insured inpatients residing in a major Chinese city for the period 2010–2015, this study constructs a DID (difference-in-differences) model to compare the impact of price deregulation on medical expenditure and expenditure structure between public and private nonprofit hospitals. Results The empirical results based on micro data reveal that, price deregulated significantly increased the total expenditure per inpatient visit by 10.5%. In the itemized expenditure, the diagnostic test and drug expenditure per inpatient visit of private nonprofit hospitals decreased significantly, whereas the physician service expenditure per inpatient visit increased significantly. For expenditure structure, the proportions of drug expenditure and diagnostic test expenditure per inpatient visit significantly decreased by 5.7 and 3.1%, respectively. Furthermore, this paper also found that hospitals had larger price changes for dominant diseases than for non-dominant diseases. Conclusions Under price regulation, medical service prices generally become lower than their costs. Therefore, after price deregulation, private nonprofit hospitals increase medical service prices above their cost and achieve the service premium increasing physician medical services. Further, although price deregulation causes patient expenditure to increase to a certain level, it optimizes the expenditure structure, as well.
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- 2021
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43. Medical expenditure and its inequity for people with disabilities: Evidence from the CHARLS 2018 data
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Shengxuan Jin, Ying Sun, Jun Tao, Lanlan Tian, Jiawei Lin, and Dongfu Qian
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disabilities ,medical expenditure ,inequality ,two-part model ,horizontal inequity index ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionDisabilities may raise heavy medical expenses and rich-poor inequalities. However, data is lacking for the Chinese older populations. This study aimed to measure socioeconomic inequalities in medical expenses amongst the Chinese adult 45 years or older, and explored the main determinants among different disability categories.MethodData from the 2018 China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) were used. Disabilities were divided into five categories: physical disabilities, intellectual disability, vision problems, hearing problems, and multiple disabilities. The two-part model was employed to identify the factors that are associated with medical expenditures. Socioeconomic inequalities were measured by the concentration index (CI), and the horizontal inequity index (HI) which adjusts for health needs. Decomposition analysis was further applied to evaluate the contribution of each determinant.ResultsTwo thousand four hundred nineteen people were included in this study. The CIs and HIs of the expenditure were both positive. Amongst the varied types of medical expenses, the highest CIs were found for self-treatment expenses (0.0262). Amongst the five categories of disabilities, the group with vision problem disability reported the highest CIs and HIs for outpatient expenses (CI = 0.0843, HI = 0.0751), self-treatment expenses (CI = 0.0958, HI = 0.1119), and total expenses (CI = 0.0622, HI = 0.0541). The group of intellectual disability reported the highest CI and HI (CI = 0.0707, HI = 0.0625). The decomposition analysis showed that income (80.32%), education (25.14%) and living in the rural areas (13.96%) were the main determinants of medical expenses for HI amongst all types of disabilities.ConclusionFor five types of disabilities, our data shows that medical expenses concentrated in the richer groups in China. Income, education, and rural areas factors were the main contributors to the economic-related inequalities. Health policies to improve the affordability of medical care are needed to decrease inequity of medical expenditures for people with disabilities.
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- 2022
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44. Comparable estimates of out-of-pocket payment on hospitalisation and outpatient services in India, 2004-18
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Sanjay K. Mohanty, Balakrushna Padhi, Rajeev Ranjan Singh, and Umakanta Sahoo
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Out-of-pocket payment ,Hospitalisation ,Health services ,Medical expenditure ,India ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Comparable estimates of household health spending and out-of-pocket (OOP) payment on health care in India are a daunting task. Often these estimates are provided for specific services such as maternal care, type of disease, hospitalisation, outpatient care, and an episode of hospitalisation. This paper presents comprehensive and comparable estimates of health spending and out-of-pocket payment on hospitalisation and outpatient care in India over the past 15 years. Methods: A total of 73,868 households in 2004, 65,932 households in 2014, and 113,823 households in 2018 surveyed in the 60th, 71st, and 75th rounds of NSSO health surveys, respectively, were used in the analysis. Descriptive statistics, concentration index, two-part regression, and logistic regression were used in the analysis. Results: The utilisation of hospitalisation services has increased over time. During 2004–18, the mean adjusted OOP payment on hospitalisation at 2018 prices was 308 US$ in 2004,353 US$ in 2014 and 332 US$ by 2018. Reimbursement on medical spending was only 2%, 7% and 11% of medical spending in 2004, 2014 and 2018 respectively. Both medical spending and OOP on inpatient and outpatient care showed large inter-state variations. The OOP payment on inpatient and outpatient care was significantly higher among richer households in urban households, households without health insurance, households having an elderly member and female-headed households. Conclusion: Though the households OOP for outpatient and inpatient, in recent years had declined, OOP as a share of medical expenditure remained high over time and majority of the households are not yet covered under any health protection scheme in India.
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- 2022
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45. Medical expenditure for strabismus: a hospital-based retrospective survey.
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Yang, Lei, Min, Yiduo, Jia, Zhiyan, Wang, Yupeng, Zhang, Rihui, and Sun, Bitong
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STRABISMUS surgery ,HOSPITALS ,GENERAL anesthesia ,MEDICAL care costs ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ACQUISITION of data ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,MEDICAL records ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STRABISMUS - Abstract
Background and aims: The misconception of the purpose of strabismus treatment has, on the one hand, affected the motivation of strabismus patients to seek care and, on the other hand, has resulted in strabismus not being covered by health insurance, both of which interact to limit the motivation of strabismus patients and also impose a financial burden on strabismus patients. Previous studies on the cost of strabismus had only addressed the cost utility and functional and psychosocial benefits of strabismus surgery. The aim of this study was to estimate the direct medical expenditure incurred for strabismus surgery and analyze the trend for the period 2014–2019 using the data collected by local eye hospitals in northeast China. Methods: This study was based on 6-year strabismus medical expenditure data collected from the eye hospital of the first affiliated hospital of Harbin medical university, covering 3596 strabismus patients who had strabismus surgery. All medical expenditure data were adjusted to 2014 using China's annual consumer price index to remove the effects of inflation. Results: The average direct medical expenditure for strabismus cares (in 2014) was 5309.6 CNY (US$870.4), and the annual growth rates from 2015 to 2019 (compared with the previous year) were 9.3, 7.7, 21.7, 14.5, and 4.3%, respectively. Surgical expenses accounted for the highest proportion (33.1%) of the total medical expenses followed by examinations expenses (19.7%) and medical consumables expenses (18.7%). The regression coefficient for general anaesthesia was 1804.5 and age was less than 0. Conclusion: The average direct medical expenditure for strabismus increases year by year, and the growth rate is rapid. Anesthesia was the most important factor increasing medical cost, and age was negatively correlated with cost. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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46. The taxation of gap cover policies for individual taxpayers in South Africa: a critical analysis.
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Gerber, Petro and Greeff, Cecileen
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TAXATION , *CRITICAL analysis , *TAX credits , *TAX returns , *TAX laws - Abstract
Gap cover policies cover the shortfall between medical scheme benefits and the rates the service providers charge and are therefore used by individuals in South Africa to supplement payments of medical expenditure not covered by private medical schemes. Little information is available about the tax consequences of gap cover. The objective of this study is to provide a critical analysis of the issues in the normal tax treatment of gap cover for individual taxpayers in South Africa, and to make recommendations to the South African Revenue Service to mitigate these issues or practical problems. A non-empirical study based on existing literature was performed which includes a critical evaluation and analysis of gap cover policies and existing tax legislation. It is found that gap cover refunds should be subtracted from the qualifying medical expenditure used in the medical tax credit under section 6B of the Income Tax Act No. 58 of 1962. Various factors may lead to incorrect information being reported on the income tax return, this may lead to a section 6B tax credit to which the taxpayer is not entitled, or which is in excess of what the taxpayer is entitled to. It is found that gap cover contributions are not deductible and that not allowing gap cover contributions as a deduction or as a tax credit detracts from the principles of taxation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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47. The effect of different classification of hospitals on medical expenditure from perspective of classification of hospitals framework: evidence from China
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Lele Li, Tiantian Du, and Yanping Hu
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Classification of hospitals ,Medical expenditure ,Medical outcome ,multivariate regression model ,Tiered delivery system ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Different classification of hospitals (COH) have an important impact on medical expenditures in China. The objective of this study is to examine the impact of COH on medical expenditures with the hope of providing insights into appropriate care and resource allocation. Methods From the perspective of COH framework, using the Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance (UEBMI) data of Chengdu City from 2011 to 2015, with sample size of 488,623 hospitalized patients, our study empirically analyzed the effect of COH on medical expenditure by multivariate regression modeling. Results The average medical expenditure was 5468.86 Yuan (CNY), the average expenditure of drug, diagnostic testing, medical consumables, nursing care, bed, surgery and blood expenditures were 1980.06 Yuan (CNY), 1536.27 Yuan (CNY), 500.01 Yuan (CNY), 166.23 Yuan (CNY), 221.98 Yuan (CNY), 983.18 Yuan (CNY) and 1733.21 Yuan (CNY) respectively. Patients included in the analysis were mainly elderly, with an average age of 86.65 years old. Female and male gender were split evenly. The influence of COH on total medical expenditures was significantly negative (p
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- 2020
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48. Medical expenditure for patients with hemophilia in urban China: data from medical insurance information system from 2013 to 2015
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Guang-wen Gong, Ying-chun Chen, Peng-qian Fang, and Rui Min
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Medical expenditure ,Hemophilia ,China ,Urban employee basic medical insurance ,Urban residence basic medical insurance ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Hemophilia, a high-cost disease, is the only rare disease covered by basic medical insurance in all province of China. However, very few studies have estimated the medical expenditure of patients with this rare disease Therefore, this study is aimed at evaluating the medical expenditure of patients with hemophilia and identifying its determinants. Methods The study population included 450 patients with hemophilia who were extracted from the national insurance database between 2014 and 2016. An independent-sample Kolmogorov–Smirnov test was performed to compare the medical expenditure of patients with hemophilia covered under urban employee basic medical insurance (UEBMI) and urban residence basic medical insurance (URBMI). Quantile regression analysis was conducted to explore the factors that affect the medical expenditure of patients with hemophilia. Results The total annual medical expenditure of patients with hemophilia in 2013, 2014, and 2015 had median of ¥7167 (US$ 1156), ¥3522 (US$ 577), and ¥4197 (US$ 677), respectively. The median medical expenditures of patients with hemophilia covered by UEBMI were ¥10,991 (US$ 1773), ¥2301 (US$ 377) and ¥8074 (US$ 1302), those of patients covered by URBMI were ¥4000 (US$ 645), ¥5717 (US$ 937) and ¥3141 (US$ 507) from 2013 to 2015. The differences in the medical expenditure of patients with hemophilia between UEBMI and URBMI from 2013 to 2015 were statistically significant. The number of admissions and the number of hospital days were statistically significant and positive for all quantiles. The types of medical service were statistically significant and negative for 50th quantile, and the reimbursement ratio was statistically significant and positive for 50th and 75th quantiles. (p
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- 2020
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49. The short-term effects of fixed copayment policy on elderly health spending and service utilization: evidence from South Korea’s age-based policy using exact date of birth
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Han, SeungHoon and Sohn, Hosung
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- 2023
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50. In-patient Expenditure Between 2012 and 2020 Concerning Patients With Liver Cirrhosis in Chongqing: A Hospital-Based Multicenter Retrospective Study
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Juntao Tan, Xuewen Tang, Yuxin He, Xiaomei Xu, Daoping Qiu, Jianfei Chen, Qinghua Zhang, and Lingqin Zhang
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liver cirrhosis ,medical expenditure ,multiple linear regression ,time trends ,China ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundLiver cirrhosis is a major global health and economic challenge, placing a heavy economic burden on patients, families, and society. This study aimed to investigate medical expenditure trends in patients with liver cirrhosis and assess the drivers for such medical expenditure among patients with liver cirrhosis.MethodsMedical expenditure data concerning patients with liver cirrhosis was collected in six tertiary hospitals in Chongqing, China, from 2012 to 2020. Trends in medical expenses over time and trends according to subgroups were described, and medical expenditure compositions were analyzed. A multiple linear regression model was constructed to evaluate the factors influencing medical expenditure. All expenditure data were reported in Chinese Yuan (CNY), based on the 2020 value, and adjusted using the year-specific health care consumer price index for Chongqing.ResultsMedical expenditure for 7,095 patients was assessed. The average medical expenditure per patient was 16,177 CNY. An upward trend in medical expenditure was observed in almost all patient subgroups. Drug expenses were the largest contributor to medical expenditure in 2020. A multiple linear regression model showed that insurance type, sex, age at diagnosis, marital status, length of stay, smoking status, drinking status, number of complications, autoimmune liver disease, and the age-adjusted Charlson comorbidity index score were significantly related to medical expenditure.ConclusionConservative estimates suggest that the medical expenditure of patients with liver cirrhosis increased significantly from 2012 to 2020. Therefore, it is necessary to formulate targeted measures to reduce the personal burden on patients with liver cirrhosis.
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- 2022
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