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The impact of the Syrian Refugee Crisis on the health access in Turkiye: A synthetic control analysis

Suriyeli Mülteci Krizinin Türkiye'de Sağlığa Erişim Üzerindeki Etkisi: Sentetik kontrol analizi
[journal article]

İkızler, Hüseyin
Dolu, Aslı
Yüksel, Emre

Abstract

One of the most critical determinants of a healthy life is the level of accessibility to health services when needed. The literature defines the unmet need for healthcare services as "whether the individual (in the last twelve months) cannot apply to a doctor despite the need for medical examination... view more

One of the most critical determinants of a healthy life is the level of accessibility to health services when needed. The literature defines the unmet need for healthcare services as "whether the individual (in the last twelve months) cannot apply to a doctor despite the need for medical examination or treatment." One of the main reasons to cause an unmet health care need is the expensive healthcare cost due to increased demand. Mainly, there are increases in demand due to reasons such as population growth and migration movements. Turkey experienced a large-scale migration as a consequence of the Syrian civil war. Based on the Disaster and Emergency Management Agency figures, as of 2018, Turkey is home to about 3.4 million Syrian refugees under temporary protection status. İkizler et al. (2020) point out that this large-scale migration results in a nearly 6.3% increase in unmet healthcare need at the beginning of the refugee crisis. However, the effect weakens gradually. This paper aims to support the results of İkizler et al. (2020) by exploiting the synthetic control method, and OECD's and EUROSTAT's country-level data set related to health care. Even though we control for the 2009 crisis, we observe that the synthetic values of the UHCN for Turkey do not coincide well, especially for the period 2009-2010. The results suggest that the impact of the mass influx of refugees on Turkey's UHCN ceases to exist, wiped away mostly by the government's increase in health investment. Although this makes the synthetic series slightly different from Turkey's series, the results provide intuitive information.... view less

Keywords
Turkey; Syria; refugee; health care; health; demand; migration; population development

Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Health Policy

Free Keywords
heath access; synthetic control; the Syrian crisis; unmet healthcare needs; EU-SILC 2008-2019

Document language
English

Publication Year
2022

Page/Pages
p. 165-174

Journal
Uluslararası Ekonomi ve Yenilik Dergisi / International Journal of Economics and Innovation, 8 (2022) 2

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20979/ueyd.1077331

ISSN
2149-6838

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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