大流行的不确定性是否会刺激公共卫生支出?来自欧盟经济体的证据。

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 NURSING
Wentao Chang, Xinjian Zhou, Raima Nazar, Sajid Ali
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本研究旨在评估选定的欧盟国家(德国、法国、瑞典、比利时、奥地利、荷兰、丹麦、西班牙、芬兰和葡萄牙)大流行不确定性与公共卫生支出之间的不对称关系。早期的研究使用小组数据方法得出关于大流行病与保健支出关系的一致结果,而不顾许多经济体没有独立确定这种联系的现实。相比之下,本研究采用了一种独特的技术,分位数对分位数,通过对变量之间的联系提供全球但与国家相关的见解,探索每个国家的时间序列依赖性。估计表明,大流行的不确定性增加了大多数选定经济体在特定数据分位数上的公共卫生支出。此外,数据表明,我们的变量之间的不对称程度因国家而异,这强调了决策者在执行有关卫生支出和大流行不确定性的政策时给予特别关注的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does pandemic uncertainty spur public health expenditures? Evidence from European Union economies.

This research intends to evaluate the asymmetric relationship between pandemic uncertainty and public health expenditures in selected European Union nations (Germany, France, Sweden, Belgium, Austria, Netherlands, Denmark, Spain, Finland, and Portugal). Earlier studies used panel data methodologies to get consistent results about the pandemic-health expenditures nexus, irrespective of the reality that numerous economies did not identify such a link independently. By contrast, the present research utilizes a unique technique, quantile-on-quantile, that explores time-series dependency in every nation by offering worldwide yet country-related insight into the linkage between the variables. Estimations reveal that pandemic uncertainty increases public health expenditures in most of the selected economies at specified quantiles of data. Additionally, the data indicate that the level of asymmetries among our variables varies by country, stressing the significance of policymakers paying special attention while executing policies concerning health expenditures and pandemic uncertainty.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
91
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: NHS has a multidisciplinary focus and broad scope and a particular focus on the translation of research into clinical practice, inter-disciplinary and multidisciplinary work, primary health care, health promotion, health education, management of communicable and non-communicable diseases, implementation of technological innovations and inclusive multicultural approaches to health services and care.
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