What is the major driver of China’s hospital medical expenditure growth? A decomposing analysis

Author:

Yan XiaolingORCID,Liu YuanliORCID,Rao Keqin,Li Jinlei

Abstract

ObjectivesThis study aimed to quantify increases in the medical expenditures of public hospitals associated with changes in service use and prices, which could inform policy efforts to curb the future growth of hospital medical expenditures.DesignNationwide and provincial data regarding service volume, service price and intensity of public hospitals’ outpatient and inpatient care from 2008 to 2018 were extracted from the China Health Statistical Yearbooks, and population size data were obtained from the 2019 China Statistical Yearbook.MethodsA decomposition analysis was performed to measure the relative effects of changes in service use (volume or its subcomponent factors) and service price and intensity on the increase in the inpatient and outpatient total medical expenditures of public hospitals from 2008 to 2018.ResultsAfter adjusting for price inflation, the total medical expenditure of public hospitals increased by approximately threefold from 2008 to 2018. During this period, the increase in service volume was associated with 67.4% of the observed increase in the total medical expenditures in the inpatient sector and 57.2% of the observed increase in the total medical expenditures in the outpatient sector. Most of the service volume effect is due to an increase in the hospital utilisation rate. The growth in the utilisation rate was associated with 73.7% of the observed growth in the total medical expenditures in the inpatient sector and 60.3% of the observed growth in the total medical expenditures in the outpatient sector.ConclusionService use, rather than price, appears to be the major driver of increases in medical expenditures in Chinese hospitals. An important policy implication for China and other countries with similar drivers is that the effect of controlling price and intensity growth on containing medical costs could be limited and controlling service utilisation growth could be essential.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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