ترجمه مقاله نقش ضروری ارتباطات 6G با چشم انداز صنعت 4.0
- مبلغ: ۸۶,۰۰۰ تومان
ترجمه مقاله پایداری توسعه شهری، تعدیل ساختار صنعتی و کارایی کاربری زمین
- مبلغ: ۹۱,۰۰۰ تومان
abstract
Local public hospitals (LPH) in Japan were established to secure equal accessibility and to improve quality for the health care system by providing policy-based medical services. Difficulties faced by the LPHs challenged the equal accessibility of the health care system and the improvement of their financial situation. We try to investigate the impact of LPH burden on the health care system and attempt to repair the problems confronting LPHs in order to attain the higher health care quality based upon the technology innovation. Panel data regression is used to analyze the effect of proportion of LPH beds and an indicator of LPH burden on hospital personnel numbers and also on estimated national medical expenditure (ENME) using the data from 2005 to 2010 for 47 prefectures in Japan. Hospital personnel, a major supply-side indicator, increased more in prefectures shouldering smaller burden of LPH beds. Prefectural ENME, an important demand-side indicator composing of medical expenditure based on the location of medical facilities, tends to decrease with increasing prefectural LPH burden. The results indicate that patients in the prefectures carrying more LPH burden tend to seek health care in the prefectures bearing less LPH burden during the research period. These imbalances substantially increase after the LPH reform.
5. Conclusion
Our findings reveal that, first, the number of hospital staff rises as the LPH burden reduces; second, medical-facility-location-based ENME increases in prefectures with less LPH burden. The scale of these two increases accelerates after the LPH reform. These findings suggest that the policies related to LPH system after 2005 have tended to compromise accessibility to better medical services quality for residents in prefectures bearing heavy LPH burden. We can say that the relation between accessibility to better medical services quality and the LPH burden to local governments needs to be made clearer and more accurate through various types of researches.