Author/Authors :
Rezaei, Satar Research Center for Environmental Determinants of Health - Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences, Kermanshah, Iran , Fallah, Razieh Amol Imam Reza Hospital - Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, Iran , Kazemi Karyani, Ali Department of Health Management and Economics - School of Public Health - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Daroudi, Rajabali Department of Health Management and Economics - School of Public Health - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Zandiyan, Hamed Department of Public Health - School of health - Ardabil University of Medical Sciences, Ardabil, Iran , Hajizadeh, Mohammad School of Health Administration - Faculty of Health Professions - Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada
Abstract :
Background: A dramatic increase in healthcare expenditures is a major health policy concern
worldwide. Understanding factors that underlie the growth in healthcare expenditures is essential to
assist decision-makers in finding best policies to manage healthcare costs. We aimed to examine the
determinants of healthcare spending in Iran over the periods of 1978-2011.
Methods: A time series analysis was used to examine the effect of selected socio-economic, demographic
and health service input on per capita healthcare expenditures (HCE) in Iran from 1978 to
2011. Data were retrieved from the Central Bank of Iran, Iranian Statistical Center and World Bank.
Autoregressive distributed lag approach and error correction method were employed to examine
long- and short-run effects of covariates.
Results: Our findings indicated that the GDP per capita, degree of urbanization and illiteracy rate
increase healthcare expenditures, while physician per 10,000 populations and proportion of population
aged≥ 65 years decrease healthcare expenditures. In addition, we found that healthcare spending
is a “necessity good” with long- and short-run income (GDP per capita), elasticities of 0.46 (p<0.01)
and 0.67 (p = 0.01), respectively.
Conclusion: Our analysis identified GDP per capita, illiteracy rate, degree of urbanization and
number of physicians as some of the driving forces behind the persistent increase in HCE in Iran.
These findings provide important insights into the growth in HCE in Iran. In addition, since we
found that health spending is a “necessity good” in Iran, healthcare services should thus be the object
of public funding and government intervention.
Keywords :
Iran , Time series analysis , Error correction method , Autoregressive distributed lag approach , Healthcare expenditures