Vaccination Policy, Delayed Care and Health Expenditures

被引:0
|
作者
Aslim, Erkmen G. [1 ]
Fu, Wei [2 ]
Liu, Chia-Lun [3 ]
Tekin, Erdal [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vermont, Burlington, VT USA
[2] Univ Louisville, Louisville, KY USA
[3] Anal Grp, Boston, MA USA
[4] Amer Univ, Inst Lab Econ IZA, Washington, DC USA
[5] Natl Bur Econ Res NBER, Cambridge, MA USA
来源
ECONOMIC JOURNAL | 2024年 / 134卷 / 664期
关键词
EMERGENCY-DEPARTMENT VISITS; MEDICAL INNOVATION; UNITED-STATES; COVID-19; INSURANCE; BEHAVIOR; ACCESS; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1093/ej/ueae051
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This paper evaluates the effect of COVID-19 vaccination on the individual propensity to delay or skip medical care. Our research design exploits the arguably exogenous variation in age-specific vaccine eligibility rollout across states and over time as an instrument for individual vaccination status. We find that receiving a COVID-19 vaccine reduces the likelihood of delaying care for any medical condition by 37%. Furthermore, our analysis reveals that children are significantly less likely to delay or skip healthcare as a result of their parents becoming vaccine eligible, indicating the presence of a positive health spillover within households that extends beyond protection against infection. Our analysis also shows that vaccination reduces concerns about contracting or spreading COVID-19, leading to increased mobility and potentially reducing delays or avoidance in seeking healthcare. Additionally, we find that vaccination notably increased access to elective care and surgeries, but had no significant impact on emergency department admissions, mental health cases or other medical conditions. Our results highlight the important role that vaccines play in, not only protecting against coronavirus, but also safeguarding against the worsening of health due to delayed or foregone medical care. The decline in delayed or foregone care caused by vaccination is particularly strong among minorities and those with a low socioeconomic background, revealing an important role that vaccination efforts can play in narrowing inequities in health and healthcare. In supplementary analysis, we use novel data on debit and credit card spending to demonstrate that increased vaccine uptake has a positive, albeit statistically insignificant, effect on consumer healthcare spending in the short run. Taken together, our findings imply that advancements in vaccine development coupled with a regulatory process that accelerates the availability of vaccines to the public in a safe manner can have the additional benefit of tackling unmet healthcare needs during a public health crisis.
引用
收藏
页码:3096 / 3136
页数:41
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Rural areas and children's health care coverage, use, expenditures, and quality: Policy implications
    Dougherty, Denise
    Simpson, Lisa A.
    McCormick, Marie C.
    AMBULATORY PEDIATRICS, 2006, 6 (05) : 265 - 267
  • [32] Econometric Modeling of Health Care Costs and Expenditures A Survey of Analytical Issues and Related Policy Considerations
    Mullahy, John
    MEDICAL CARE, 2009, 47 (07) : S104 - S108
  • [33] Delayed Health Care
    Daubon, Shorraine
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NURSING, 2023, 123 (10) : 9 - 9
  • [34] Four Flavours of Health Expenditures: A Discussion of the Potential Implications of the Distribution of Health Expenditures for Financing Health Care
    Deber, Raisa B.
    Lam, Kenneth C. K.
    Roos, Leslie L.
    CANADIAN PUBLIC POLICY-ANALYSE DE POLITIQUES, 2014, 40 (04): : 353 - 363
  • [35] State policy environment and delayed or forgone care among children with special health care needs
    Gnanasekaran, Sangeeth K.
    Boudreau, Alexy Arauz
    Soobader, Mah-J
    Yucel, Recai
    Hill, Kristen
    Kuhlthau, Karen
    MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL, 2008, 12 (06) : 739 - 746
  • [36] State Policy Environment and Delayed or Forgone Care Among Children with Special Health Care Needs
    Sangeeth K. Gnanasekaran
    Alexy Arauz Boudreau
    Mah-J Soobader
    Recai Yucel
    Kristen Hill
    Karen Kuhlthau
    Maternal and Child Health Journal, 2008, 12 : 739 - 746
  • [37] Mandatory Influenza Vaccination for Nurses and Other Health Care Workers; Implications for Health Policy and Practice
    Keepnews, David M.
    Yannaco, Theresa
    NURSING RESEARCH, 2013, 62 (02) : E28 - E28
  • [38] National Health Care Expenditures Associated With Disability
    Khavjou, Olga A.
    Anderson, Wayne L.
    Honeycutt, Amanda A.
    Bates, Laurel G.
    Razzaghi, Hilda
    Hollis, NaTasha D.
    Grosse, Scott D.
    MEDICAL CARE, 2020, 58 (09) : 826 - 832
  • [39] National Health Care Expenditures Addressing the Cost of Health Care in the United States
    Greenfield, Lazar J.
    ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2010, 251 (02) : 203 - 204
  • [40] Health Care Expenditures for Urban and Rural Veterans in Veterans Health Administration Care
    West, Alan N.
    Weeks, William B.
    HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2009, 44 (05) : 1718 - 1734