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Corruption, inequality and population perception of healthcare quality in Europe

[journal article]

Nikoloski, Zlatko
Mossialos, Elias

Abstract

Background: Evaluating the quality of healthcare and patient safety using general population questionnaires is important from research and policy perspective. Using a special wave of the Eurobarometer survey, we analysed the general population’s perception of health care quality and patient safety i... view more

Background: Evaluating the quality of healthcare and patient safety using general population questionnaires is important from research and policy perspective. Using a special wave of the Eurobarometer survey, we analysed the general population’s perception of health care quality and patient safety in a cross-country setting. Methods: We used ordered probit, ordinary least squares and probit analysis to estimate the determinants of health care quality, and ordered logit analysis to analyse the likelihood of being harmed by a specific medical procedure. The models used population weights as well as country-clustered standard errors. Results: We found robust evidence for the impact of socio-demographic variables on the perception of quality of health care. More specifically, we found a non-linear impact of age on the perception of quality of health care and patient safety, as well as a negative impact of poverty on both perception of quality and patient safety. We also found robust evidence that countries with higher corruption levels were associated with worse perceptions of quality of health care. Finally, we found evidence that income inequality affects patients’ perception vis-à-vis safety, thus feeding into the poverty/health care quality nexus. Conclusions: Socio-demographic factors and two macro variables (corruption and income inequality) explain the perception of quality of health care and likelihood of being harmed by adverse events. The results carry significant policy weight and could explain why targeting only the health care sector (without an overall reform of the public sector) could potentially be challenging.... view less

Keywords
quality; health care; evaluation; health care delivery system; corruption; inequality; difference in income; EU; Europe

Classification
Health Policy

Free Keywords
Quality of healthcare; Access to healthcare; Special Eurobarometer 327

Document language
English

Publication Year
2013

Page/Pages
p. 1-10

Journal
BMC Health Services Research, 13 (2013)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-472

ISSN
1472-6963

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 2.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.