1 / 11

Anna Zawada a.zawada@esa.com.pl Hanover, 09.02.2012

Quantitative Analysis of Health Equity (on the base of course and w orkshop s, Genewa, 8-12.06.2009). Anna Zawada a.zawada@esa.com.pl Hanover, 09.02.2012. Basics.

micah
Download Presentation

Anna Zawada a.zawada@esa.com.pl Hanover, 09.02.2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quantitative Analysis of Health Equity(on the base of course and workshops,Genewa, 8-12.06.2009) Anna Zawada a.zawada@esa.com.pl Hanover, 09.02.2012

  2. Basics • Equality refers to the description of differences in health observed in population and it’s distribution, the cause may be differences in access • Equity focuses attention on the distribution of resources and other processes that drive a systematic inequality in health (or in its social determinants) between more and less advantaged social groups – a health inequality that is unjust or unfair • vanDoorslaer et al. methodology is based on economic methodology of description of the income distribution in groups ordered by growing income – Lorenz curve, Gini index; mathematic/statistic: linear corelation, linear regression; STATA – programming tool used by academics with shared macros

  3. Lorenz curve, Gini index Lorenz curve describes income distribution in the population: OX axis – cummulated % of population ranked by growing income; OY axis – cummulated % of income in the population group; In economy Lorenz curve always lies under the diagonal (line of eqality) GI=A/(A+B)=2A (as A+B=1/2) 0<GI<1 v.Doorslear, O’Donnell, course materials

  4. Concentration curve, concentration index Concentration curve represents the distribution of the financing/utilization of healthcare variable: OX axis – cummulated % of population ranked by growing income; OY axis – cumulated healthcare variable values (eg. specjalist visits utilization); Concentration curve may lay under or over the line of equality or may cross it CI=A/(A+B)=2A (as A+B=1/2) -1<CI<1 CI<0 when variable is higher amongst poor A B

  5. Financing/utilization of healthcare variables • Financial – spending on health care: spending incorporated in taxes, social/private insurance, out-of-pocket spending, catastrophic payments; health subsidies • Utilization – number of GPs visits, number of specjlists visits, number of dental services, hospitalizations • Health outcomes – children: under-five mortality rate, height or weight in relation to the age and sex (as a measure of malnutrition), immunization; adults: self-assessed health (if expressed in ordering scale – should be converted into binary variable by setting a threshold or to health-related utilities)

  6. Concentration curve (2) CC lying above equality line in case of under-five mortality variable, as in this chart, are „pro poor” (higher under-five mortality in poor people than in rich ones – not beneficiary for low-income groups) v.Doorslear, O’Donnell, course materials

  7. Redistributive effect of healthcare payment • Health care spending may be the cause of health inequalitiesif it increase social disadvantages • A proportional health care payments leave income inequality unaffected and has zero redistributive effect. • Progressive health care payments lower post-payment income inequality, and have a positive or pro-poor redistributive effect • Regressive health care payments leave the post-payment income distribution less equal than the pre-payment one, and have a negative or pro-rich redistributive effect • Kakwani index, which is defined as twice thearea between a CC and the Lorenz curve, can be used as a summarymeasure of progressivity; -2<KI<1; KI is negative (positive) if the CC dominates (is dominated by) the Lorenz curve.

  8. Quantitative Analysis of Health Equity • Course & workshops for PhD students, at Univ. of Geneva, provided by • Prof. Eddy vanDoorslaer, Erasmus Univ., Rotterdam, Netherlands • Prof. Owen O’Donnel, Univ. of Macedonia, Thessaloniki,Greece • Methodology has been developped by ECuity Project team http://www2.eur.nl/bmg/ecuity/ on the base of economic studies on inequities in health care systems in OECD countires (ECuity) as well as in the Asia-Pacific region (EQUITAP) • Course handbook, slides and STATA macros on World Bank website www.worldbank.org/analyzinghealthequity

  9. Sources of data Survey data • European Community Household Panel (ECHP) at Eurostat website • EU Survey on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) • Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) • World Bank’s Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) • Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) by UNICEF • National surveys, eg. Social Diagnosis (Diagnoza społeczna) http://www.diagnoza.com/ Administrative Data Census Data

  10. Thank you for your attention Anna Zawada a.zawada@esa.com.pl

More Related