This work investigates the determinants of health care expenditures, such as drug prescriptions, inpatient care, and outpatient care, of the resident population of the Region of Friuli Venezia Giulia (Italy). The phenomenon of interest is examined here by considering a cross-sectional register-based dataset on individual expenditures exhibiting a cross-classified hierarchical structure. In fact, patients (about 1,000,000) are grouped by general practitioners and municipalities. Does the evidence in indi- vidual data analyses support the results of the micro- and macroeconomic literature? The adoption of disaggregated data allows us to disentangle the role of the micro- and macroeconomic determinants of the expenditures. Moreover, the degree of inter- dependence between neighbouring municipalities is measured by accounting for the spatial correlation in the error convolution. A feasible two-stage Heckit method has to be adapted to encompass the zero-inflation issue, to consider the hierarchical structure of data and to study the spatial diffusion process of the expenditures in the sample selection model framework. The main results on the determinants of health care expen- ditures at the macro-level are confirmed in our analysis on disaggregated data. On the contrary, however, the substitution effect, which is typically observed in aggregated data, has not been confirmed by the present research. Moreover, the selection process appears to be relevant in drug prescriptions and outpatient care expenditures and a significant spatial correlation in both the selection and the outcome equations emerges from the structure of error components.
The determinants of individual health care expenditures in the Italian region of Friuli Venezia Giulia: evidence from a hierarchical spatial model estimation
Grassetti, Luca
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;Rizzi, LauraWriting – Review & Editing
2019-01-01
Abstract
This work investigates the determinants of health care expenditures, such as drug prescriptions, inpatient care, and outpatient care, of the resident population of the Region of Friuli Venezia Giulia (Italy). The phenomenon of interest is examined here by considering a cross-sectional register-based dataset on individual expenditures exhibiting a cross-classified hierarchical structure. In fact, patients (about 1,000,000) are grouped by general practitioners and municipalities. Does the evidence in indi- vidual data analyses support the results of the micro- and macroeconomic literature? The adoption of disaggregated data allows us to disentangle the role of the micro- and macroeconomic determinants of the expenditures. Moreover, the degree of inter- dependence between neighbouring municipalities is measured by accounting for the spatial correlation in the error convolution. A feasible two-stage Heckit method has to be adapted to encompass the zero-inflation issue, to consider the hierarchical structure of data and to study the spatial diffusion process of the expenditures in the sample selection model framework. The main results on the determinants of health care expen- ditures at the macro-level are confirmed in our analysis on disaggregated data. On the contrary, however, the substitution effect, which is typically observed in aggregated data, has not been confirmed by the present research. Moreover, the selection process appears to be relevant in drug prescriptions and outpatient care expenditures and a significant spatial correlation in both the selection and the outcome equations emerges from the structure of error components.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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RizziGras_EmpEcon.pdf
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