Analysis of the Relationships between Compulsory Health Spending, Doctors, Hospital Beds and Hospital Stays for Turkiye

被引:0
|
作者
Kilci, Esra N. [1 ]
机构
[1] Istanbul Univ Cerrahpasa, Dept Hlth Econ, Istanbul, Turkiye
关键词
compulsory health spending; hospital beds; number of doctors; hospital stay;
D O I
10.26650/ekoist.2023.39.1334140
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
A significant part of health expenditures is allocated to hospitals, but whether the funds invested in resources are used successfully or not is determined by assessing factors such as the number of hospital beds and the number of doctors. Additionally, the length of hospital stay is a critical performance indicator. The objective of this paper is to investigate the mutual relationships between compulsory health spending, the number of doctors, the number of hospital beds, and hospital stays in the case of a developing country. We focus on Turkiye using the annual data on compulsory health spending (U.S dollars/capita), the number of doctors (per 1.000 inhabitants), the number of hospital beds (per 1.000 inhabitants), and the length of hospital stay (days) for the period of 1994-2020. In our analysis, following testing the stationary properties of the variables, we employ the Fourier causality tests proposed by Enders and Jones (2016) and Nazlioglu et al. (2016) to analyze the causality links between compulsory health spending, the number of doctors, the number of hospital beds and the length of hospital stay. Our findings confirm the evidence of causal runs from compulsory health spending to the number of hospital beds and from the number of doctors to compulsory health spending in the relevant period.
引用
收藏
页码:101 / 111
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [22] Nonparametric frontier model as a tool for exploratory analysis of hospital stays
    Beguin, C
    METHODS OF INFORMATION IN MEDICINE, 2001, 40 (03) : 241 - 247
  • [23] Choice of Models for the Analysis and Forecasting of Hospital Beds
    Mark Mackay
    Michael Lee
    Health Care Management Science, 2005, 8 (3) : 221 - 230
  • [24] The Association Between Frailty and Hospital Stays Among Geriatric Trauma Patients: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis
    Adeyemi, O.
    Grudzen, C.
    DiMaggio, C.
    Cuthel, A.
    Arcila-Mesa, M.
    Wittman, I
    Konda, S.
    Tyrie, L.
    Poracky, H.
    Meyman, P.
    Chodosh, J.
    ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 2023, 82 (04) : S133 - S134
  • [25] Analysis of the expenses linked to hospital stays: How to detect outliers
    Beguin C.
    Simar L.
    Health Care Management Science, 2004, 7 (2) : 89 - 96
  • [26] In-Hospital Stays for Urolithiasis: Analysis of French National Data
    Raynal, G.
    Tligui, M.
    Traxer, O.
    UROLOGY, 2012, 80 (03) : S317 - S318
  • [27] In-hospital stays for urolithiasis: Analysis of French national data
    Raynal, G.
    Merlet, B.
    Traxer, O.
    PROGRES EN UROLOGIE, 2011, 21 (07): : 459 - 462
  • [28] Analysis of racial differences in hospital stays in the presence of geographic confounding
    Davis, Melanie L.
    Neelon, Brian
    Nietert, Paul J.
    Burgette, Lane F.
    Hunt, Kelly J.
    Lawson, Andrew B.
    Egede, Leonard E.
    SPATIAL AND SPATIO-TEMPORAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2019, 30
  • [29] Hospital ownership of doctors' practices is linked to higher prices and spending, US study finds
    McCarthy, Michael
    BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2014, 348
  • [30] Hospital Community Benefit Spending: Leaning In on the Social Determinantsof Health
    Rosenbaum, Sara
    MILBANK QUARTERLY, 2016, 94 (02): : 251 - 254