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Do waiting times affect health outcomes? Evidence from coronary bypass

Do waiting times affect health outcomes? Evidence from coronary bypass
Do waiting times affect health outcomes? Evidence from coronary bypass
Long waiting times for non-emergency services are a feature of several publicly-funded health systems. A key policy concern is that long waiting times may worsen health outcomes: when patients receive treatment, their health condition may have deteriorated and health gains reduced. This study investigates whether patients in need of coronary bypass with longer waiting times are associated with poorer health outcomes in the English National Health Service over 2000–2010. Exploiting information from the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), we measure health outcomes with in-hospital mortality and 28-day emergency readmission following discharge. Our results, obtained combining hospital fixed effects and instrumental variable methods, find no evidence of waiting times being associated with higher in-hospital mortality and weak association between waiting times and emergency readmission following a surgery. The results inform the debate on the relative merits of different types of rationing in healthcare systems. They are to some extent supportive of waiting times as an acceptable rationing mechanism, although further research is required to explore whether long waiting times affect other aspects of individuals’ life.
0277-9536
151-159
Moscelli, Giuseppe
2704a3ac-14fa-4ba4-bd0c-aabb762d6809
Siciliani, Luigi
adcf0c52-1f2c-4ee4-806a-2c0b0d941b77
Tonei, Valentina
0a1335c9-9eb9-433c-82c1-5dac13ce71f7
Moscelli, Giuseppe
2704a3ac-14fa-4ba4-bd0c-aabb762d6809
Siciliani, Luigi
adcf0c52-1f2c-4ee4-806a-2c0b0d941b77
Tonei, Valentina
0a1335c9-9eb9-433c-82c1-5dac13ce71f7

Moscelli, Giuseppe, Siciliani, Luigi and Tonei, Valentina (2016) Do waiting times affect health outcomes? Evidence from coronary bypass. Social Science & Medicine, 161, 151-159. (doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.05.043).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Long waiting times for non-emergency services are a feature of several publicly-funded health systems. A key policy concern is that long waiting times may worsen health outcomes: when patients receive treatment, their health condition may have deteriorated and health gains reduced. This study investigates whether patients in need of coronary bypass with longer waiting times are associated with poorer health outcomes in the English National Health Service over 2000–2010. Exploiting information from the Hospital Episode Statistics (HES), we measure health outcomes with in-hospital mortality and 28-day emergency readmission following discharge. Our results, obtained combining hospital fixed effects and instrumental variable methods, find no evidence of waiting times being associated with higher in-hospital mortality and weak association between waiting times and emergency readmission following a surgery. The results inform the debate on the relative merits of different types of rationing in healthcare systems. They are to some extent supportive of waiting times as an acceptable rationing mechanism, although further research is required to explore whether long waiting times affect other aspects of individuals’ life.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 May 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 May 2016
Published date: July 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 436961
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436961
ISSN: 0277-9536
PURE UUID: 65659016-0150-4801-887b-c017f50de020
ORCID for Valentina Tonei: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3981-4477

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Date deposited: 14 Jan 2020 17:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Giuseppe Moscelli
Author: Luigi Siciliani
Author: Valentina Tonei ORCID iD

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