Affiliation:
1. Centre for Health Economics, Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm,
2. Department of Economics, Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract
There is mutual agreement that health care should be delivered according to need. In this article, although we employ different specifications for need, we conclude that there is inequity in the delivery of health care in Sweden. Higher income groups visit doctors more often than lower income groups in relation to need, but lower income groups remain in hospital longer once they have been admitted. These findings may be interpreted to mean that lower income groups, for various reasons, wait too long before visiting a doctor for a specific disease, the consequence being that the disease is so serious by the time the doctor is contacted that inpatient care and a longer time in hospital are necessary. The policy implication of this situation is that lower patient fees and/or higher incomes may help to reduce the inequities in health care.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference32 articles.
1. Culyer A.J. Healthcare and health care finance in Sweden: the crisis that never was; the tension that ever will be. SNS Occasional Paper No. 33. Stockholm: Center for Business and Policy Studies, 1991, p. 25.
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