| Literature DB >> 30318017 |
Aviad Tur-Sinai1, Racheli Magnezi2, Haya Grinvald-Fogel2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The study documents a direct relationship between individuals' health and patterns of healthcare expenditure by isolating single-person households and creating a new reference group in which household healthcare expenditure is based on one person's expenditure patterns in accordance with his or her own state of health.Entities:
Keywords: Health self-assessment; Healthcare expenditure; Propensity score matching; Single-person; Social survey; Socioeconomic level
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30318017 PMCID: PMC6191996 DOI: 10.1186/s13584-018-0246-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Isr J Health Policy Res ISSN: 2045-4015
Descriptive statistics of research variables for single-person households, by age group
| Variables | 20–29 | 30–64 | 65+ | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health insurance*** (NIS) | 31.0 (43.8) | 134.5 (162.3) | 183.5 (184.1) | 142.6 (169.9) |
| Dental treatment*** (NIS) | 68.2 (206.9) | 125.0 (392.7) | 152.6 (420.3) | 130.3 (389.5) |
| Health services (NIS) | 65.4 (206.4) | 134.5 (593.3) | 124.5 (466.7) | 121.7 (505.5) |
| Other health-related expenditures *** (NIS) | 92.9 (140.3) | 188.1 (366.1) | 295.9 (376.2) | 229.8 (360.5) |
| Total income*** (NIS) | 5773.2 (6168.8) | 10,461.5 (9250.9) | 7682.8 (19,261.9) | 8629.4 (14,445.3) |
| Health self-assessment*** | 3.7 (.1) | 3.1 (.4) | 2.2 (.2) | 2.7 (.6) |
| Age | 24.8 (2.9) | 47.5 (11.1) | 76.6 (6.8) | 57.4 (20.4) |
| Socioeconomic level*** | ||||
| 1-low | 3.8% | 2.6% | 2.9% | 2.9% |
| 2 | 14.6% | 13.2% | 16.5% | 14.9% |
| 3 | 24.7% | 28.1% | 32.5% | 29.6% |
| 4 | 56.0% | 55.7% | 47.0% | 51.9% |
| 5-high | 0.9% | 0.3% | 1.0% | 0.7% |
| Gender** | ||||
| Male | 52.7% | 54.4% | 21.6% | 39.7% |
| Female | 47.3% | 45.6% | 78.4% | 60.3% |
| N | 285 | 996 | 955 | 2236 |
| N (weighted) | 99,581 | 332,412 | 342,902 | 774,895 |
***P < 0.001; **P < 0.01
Pearson correlations among the study variables
| Expenditures | Health Insurance | Dental treatment | Health services | Other health- related expenditures | Health self-assessment | Socioeconomic level | Total income |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health Insurance | 1 | .019 | .058* | .158** | −.273** | .118*** | .127** |
| Dental treatment | .019 | 1 | .013 | .067* | −.071* | −.001 | .036 |
| Health services | .058* | .013 | 1 | .080** | −.040 | .053 | .043 |
| Other health- related expenditures | .158** | .067* | .080** | 1 | −.194** | .053 | .015 |
| Health self-assessment | −.273** | −.071* | −.040 | −.194** | 1 | .113*** | .023 |
| Socioeconomic level | .118*** | −.001 | .053 | .053* | .113** | 1 | .126** |
| Income-total | .127** | .036 | .043 | .015 | .023 | .126*** | 1 |
***P < 0.001; **P < 0.01; *P < 0.05
Fig. 1Conceptual model
Fig. 2Single-Person Households – Young Sample (Age 20–29)
Fig. 3Single-Person Households – Middle-Age Sample (Age 30–64)
Fig. 4Single-Person Households – Old-Age Sample (Age 65+)