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A. ARABADZHYAN ; A. CASTELLI ; J. GAUGHAN ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2024Healthcare expenditure is one of the largest elements, and a growing proportion, of public spending. In the context of limited resources, it is essential for patients and policy-makers to understand the return on investment in health care. Produ[...]Document de travail
A. BIRO ; P. ELEK ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2024We provide evidence on the impact of firm productivity on the health maintenance of employees. Using linked employer-employee administrative panel data supplemented with healthcare records from Hungary, we analyze the dynamics of healthcare use [...]Document de travail
I. FRANCETIC, Auteur ; R. MEACOCK ; L. SICILIANI, Auteur ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2024The sharp increase in emergency department (ED) use in England has created long queues at busy times. Care professionals may prioritize some patients in these queues, increasing delays for others and potentially impacting both equity and efficie[...]Document de travail
A. ARABADZHYAN ; A. CASTELLI ; J. GAUGHAN ; et al. ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2023This report forms part of the time series of the English National Health Service (NHS) productivity growth calculated at the Centre for Health Economics, University of York. In this report, we focus on growth from 2019/20 to 2020/21. The COVID-1[...]Document de travail
This paper constitutes the third output of the ESHCRU2 project 3.1 “Analysis of purchaser-provider contracts: modelling risk sharing and incentive implications”. The project has focused on the implications of payment reform for what is termed bl[...]Document de travail
There is little agreement amongst those who think about fairness or equity1 in health and social care. For example, some consider that access to health should be essentially similar, in ethical respects, to access to the other good things of lif[...]Document de travail
Waiting times for planned healthcare treatments have been slowly increasing in England in the last decade, and increased sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic. One policy to reduce the impact of waiting times on patients’ health is for doctors to[...]Document de travail
P. KASTERIDIS ; L. SICILIANI, Auteur ; P. SIVEY, Auteur | York : Centre for Health Economics | 2023/11Waiting times for planned healthcare treatments have been slowly increasing in England in the last decade, and increased sharply during the COVID-19 pandemic. One policy to reduce the impact of waiting times on patients’ health is for doctors to[...]Document de travail
To plan services and staff for the NHS, the government needs to know how much demand for services will rise and how much to spend on the NHS in future. These future estimates are known as projections: they indicate how much demand might rise or [...]Document de travail
M. ANAYA-MONTES ; H. GRAVELLE ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2022Peru has a fragmented health insurance system in which most insureds can only access the providers in their insurer’s network. The two largest schemes covered 53% and 30% of the population on 5 March 2020. Some individuals have dual insurance: t[...]Document de travail
This paper constitutes the first and foundational output of the ESHCRU2 project 3 - Analysis of purchaser-provider contracts: modelling risk sharing and incentive implications. In this project, we have focused on the implications of payment refo[...]Document de travail
A. ARABADZHYAN ; A. CASTELLI ; M. CHALKLEY ; et al. ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2022This report updates the Centre for Health Economics’ time-series of National Health Service (NHS) productivity growth for the period 2018/19 to 2019/20.Document de travail
This paper constitutes the second output of the ESHCRU2 project 3.1 Analysis of purchaser-provider contracts: modelling risk sharing and incentive implications. In this project, we have focused on the implications of payment reform of blended pa[...]Document de travail
F. YANG ; C. ANGUS ; A. DUARTE ; et al. ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2021A distribution of intervention impact across socioeconomic groups can be estimated from socioeconomic differences across a staircase from need (e.g. prevalence) up to intervention characteristics (e.g. effectiveness) using distributional cost ef[...]Document de travail
O. BODNAR ; H. GRAVELLE ; N. GUTACKER ; et al. ; University of York. Centre for Health Economics. (C.H.E.). York. GBR | York : University of York | 2021Many healthcare systems prohibit primary care physicians from dispensing the drugs they prescribe due to concerns that this encourages excessive, ineffective or unnecessarily costly prescribing. Using data from the English National Health Servic[...]