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Understanding the relationships between health spending, treatable mortality and economic productivity in OECD countries. | LitMetric

Understanding the relationships between health spending, treatable mortality and economic productivity in OECD countries.

Front Public Health

Institute of Earth Resources, Faculty of Mining, Ecology, Process Control and Geotechnologies, Technical University of Košice, Košice, Slovakia.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the link between health spending, treatable respiratory mortality, and GDP in OECD countries, emphasizing the distinction between tax-based and insurance-based health systems alongside gender differences in the working-age population.
  • Findings indicate that higher health spending correlates with lower treatable respiratory mortality, particularly in tax-based health systems, with men generally experiencing higher mortality rates compared to women.
  • The research highlights that countries with tax-based systems generally have better health outcomes and GDP levels, with specific nations like Italy and Switzerland showcasing particularly positive results compared to others with less favorable outcomes.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Population health is one of the highest priorities for countries, which can translate into increased economic prosperity. This encourages research on health in an economic context.

Methods: The objective was to assess the relationships between health spending, treatable respiratory mortality, and gross domestic product (GDP) in countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The research was conducted with respect to health systems (tax-based, insurance-based) and gender differentiation of the productive population (aged 25-64 years). Descriptive analysis, regression analysis, and cluster analysis were used to achieve the main objective. The data covered the period from 1994 to 2016.

Results: The results of the regression analysis revealed negative relationships between health spending and treatable respiratory mortality in countries with a tax-based health system for male and female working-age populations, as well as in countries with an insurance-based health system for male population. This means that higher health spending was associated with lower treatable respiratory mortality. Also, lower treatable mortality was associated with higher GDP, especially in the male productive population from countries with an insurance-based health system. In this study, countries with a tax-based health system were characterized by higher health spending, lower rates of treatable mortality from respiratory system diseases, and higher GDP compared to countries with an insurance-based health system. Males reported a higher mortality rate than females. Among the countries with a tax-based health system, the United Kingdom and Latvia showed less positive outcomes, while Italy and Iceland were the countries with the most positive outcomes. Among the countries with an insurance-based health system, Hungary and Slovakia reported poor outcomes, while France, Switzerland and Luxembourg were characterized by very positive outcomes. The United States showed a high mortality rate despite its high economic outcomes, i.e., health spending and GDP.

Discussion: Health care financing in particular is one of the instruments of health policy. It seems that the leaders of countries should ensure a sufficient level of health financing, as higher health spending can contribute to lower mortality rates in a country. This may translate into higher productivity. Especially countries with underfunded health systems should increase their health spending.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9810629PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2022.1036058DOI Listing

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