Effect of public health expenditure on health outcomes in Nigeria and Ghana

IF 1.7 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Ayomide Oluwaseyi Oladosu , Timothy Chanimbe , Uchechi Shirley Anaduaka
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Despite the prevailing literature examining the effect public health expenditure has on health outcomes in Africa, Malaria and HIV/AIDS mortality which are key indicators of the outcome variable were unconsidered when drawing inferences. In view of this oversight, we investigate the impact of public health expenditure on health outcomes in Nigeria and Ghana whilst reconceptualizing health outcome by capturing infant, maternal, Malaria and HIV/AIDS mortality. Using the health expenditure commitment at the 1999 United Nations General Assembly and the Abuja Declaration of 2000, we also assessed public policy’s role in this relationship via linear regression analysis. With hindsight, our findings disclosed a low public health expenditure in both countries despite the Ghanaian case revealing a negative relationship, which was primarily insignificant whilst Nigeria indicated a positive one. These empirical evidences accentuate the need to augment public health expenditure in both countries to boost health outcomes whilst bringing to bear the significant influence of GDP, school enrolment and residing in urban areas on health outcomes.

尼日利亚和加纳公共卫生支出对健康结果的影响
尽管主流文献研究了公共卫生支出对非洲健康结果的影响,但在得出推论时,没有考虑作为结果变量关键指标的疟疾和艾滋病毒/艾滋病死亡率。鉴于这种疏忽,我们调查了尼日利亚和加纳公共卫生支出对健康结果的影响,同时通过捕获婴儿、孕产妇、疟疾和艾滋病毒/艾滋病死亡率来重新定义健康结果。利用1999年联合国大会卫生支出承诺和2000年《阿布贾宣言》,我们还通过线性回归分析评估了公共政策在这一关系中的作用。事后看来,我们的研究结果揭示了两国的公共卫生支出都很低,尽管加纳的案例揭示了负相关关系,这主要是微不足道的,而尼日利亚则表明了正相关关系。这些经验证据强调,需要增加两国的公共卫生支出,以促进卫生成果,同时考虑到国内生产总值、入学率和城市地区居民对卫生成果的重大影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Policy Open
Health Policy Open Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
审稿时长
40 weeks
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