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Health Care Expenditures, Innovation, and Demographic Change

by Yasemin Ilgin (Author)
©2008 Thesis XVII, 110 Pages

Summary

In the focus of the health care market analyses usually are increasing health care expenditures (HCE) and their future development. Considering these increasing HCE the price regulation measures are applied in the relevant pharmaceutical market to contain these increases. Some believe that HCE mainly rise due to medico-technical and pharmaceutical innovation and ageing. After reviewing international measures of price regulation, empirical studies examine the relation between innovation and ageing. The main conclusions are: the ageing effect causes rising expenditures on pharmaceuticals as well as increasing pharmaceutical innovations instrumented either as patent applications or new drug approvals; the research and development expenditures of the pharmaceutical industry lead to rising expenditures on pharmaceuticals but decreasing overall HCE; additionally, decreasing mortality is found to increase HCE. These results do not support the medicalisation hypothesis of a disproportional increase of HCE with rising share of elderly persons. Therefore, the overall impact of pharmaceutical progress on HCE is not straightforward. Consequently, predominating conclusions and political implications should be reconsidered.

Details

Pages
XVII, 110
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631581544
Language
English
Keywords
Deutschland Arzneimittelentwicklung Pharmaceutical Gesundheitsausgaben Preisregelung Bevölkerungsentwicklung Pharmaceutical Innovation Price Regulation Medical Progress
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. XVII, 110 pp., num. tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Yasemin Ilgin (Author)

The Author: Yasemin Ilgin, born in 1977, received her doctorate in economics from the University of Frankfurt on the Main. During her doctorate she worked as a research assistant at the university’s Institute of European Health Policy and Social Law (ineges).

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Title: Health Care Expenditures, Innovation, and Demographic Change