scholarly journals Health System Efficiency in European Countries: Network Data Envelopment Analysis Approach

2021 ◽  
Vol XXIV (Issue 2) ◽  
pp. 1095-1117
Author(s):  
Justyna Kujawska
BMJ Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. e022155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sayem Ahmed ◽  
Md Zahid Hasan ◽  
Mary MacLennan ◽  
Farzana Dorin ◽  
Mohammad Wahid Ahmed ◽  
...  

ObjectiveThis study aims to estimate the technical efficiency of health systems in Asia.SettingsThe study was conducted in Asian countries.MethodsWe applied an output-oriented data envelopment analysis (DEA) approach to estimate the technical efficiency of the health systems in Asian countries. The DEA model used per-capita health expenditure (all healthcare resources as a proxy) as input variable and cross-country comparable health outcome indicators (eg, healthy life expectancy at birth and infant mortality per 1000 live births) as output variables. Censored Tobit regression and smoothed bootstrap models were used to observe the associated factors with the efficiency scores. A sensitivity analysis was performed to assess the consistency of these efficiency scores.ResultsThe main findings of this paper demonstrate that about 91.3% (42 of 46 countries) of the studied Asian countries were inefficient with respect to using healthcare system resources. Most of the efficient countries belonged to the high-income group (Cyprus, Japan, and Singapore) and only one country belonged to the lower middle-income group (Bangladesh). Through improving health system efficiency, the studied high-income, upper middle-income, low-income and lower middle-income countries can improve health system outcomes by 6.6%, 8.6% and 8.7%, respectively, using the existing level of resources. Population density, bed density, and primary education completion rate significantly influenced the efficiency score.ConclusionThe results of this analysis showed inefficiency of the health systems in most of the Asian countries and imply that many countries may improve their health system efficiency using the current level of resources. The identified inefficient countries could pay attention to benchmarking their health systems within their income group or other within similar types of health systems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shawnn Melicio Coutinho ◽  
Ch. V. V. S. N. V Prasad ◽  
Rohit Prabhudesai

Purpose-With increased demand and restricted healthcare resources, it becomes important to take a step back and evaluate the efficiency of healthcare delivery. The present study aims to evaluate the health system efficiency of India by benchmarking it against its peers in BRICS countries and against OECD countries. Design/Methodology/Approach: The input and output variables required for measuring the efficiency of healthcare system were identified. A Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) approach was used and efficiency frontier identified with the rankings of the BRICS and OECD countries. India is thus benchmarked against its peers (BRICS) and against OECD countries. Finding: India was found to operate at the efficiency frontier along with China, Russia, Brazil, and South Africa, however it ranked fourth. When benchmarked against OECD countries, India operates on the efficiency frontier along with Canada, Greece, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Great Britain, Chile and Israel. Countries like Germany, United States of America, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Lithuania operate at a lower healthcare efficiency and need to use their resources wisely. Practical/Research Implications: Developing countries like India can look to improve its healthcare system delivery by replicating best practices of healthcare systems from its peers and the top 10 OECD countries. Majority of the OECD countries in the top 10 have implemented universal health coverage, have higher physician and nurse density and higher hospital bed ratios. They are inclined towards branded drugs vis-à-vis generics and have follow evidence based medicine. From a theoretical perspective, it adds to the body of literature of DEA and health system efficiency. Originality/Value: This is a pioneer study that benchmarks India against its peers and against OECD countries drawing unique insights about healthcare efficiency


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