We study the effect of ageing, defined as an extra year of life, on health care utilisation. We disentangle the direct effect of ageing, from other alternative explanations such as the presence of comorbidities and endogenous time to death (TTD) that are argued to absorb the effect of ageing (so‐called ‘red herring’ hypothesis). We exploit individual level end of life data from several European countries that record the use of medicine, outpatient and inpatient care and long‐term care. Consistently with the ‘red herring hypothesis’, we find that corrected TTD estimates are significantly different from uncorrected ones, and their effect size exceeds that of an extra year of life, which in turn is moderated by individual comorbidities. Correc...
It has been demonstrated repeatedly that time to death is a much better predictor of health care exp...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main con...
This paper revisits the debate on the red herring, viz. the claim that population ageing will not ha...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
This paper revisits the debate on the \u27red herring\u27, viz. the claim that population ageing wil...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main cont...
An open issue in the economics literature is whether health care expenditure (HCE) is so concentrate...
The red herring hypothesis contends that the high health care expenditure in old age is caused by pr...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
It has been demonstrated repeatedly that time to death is a much better predictor of health care exp...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main con...
This paper revisits the debate on the red herring, viz. the claim that population ageing will not ha...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
This paper contributes to the debate about the impact of population ageing on health care expenditur...
The impact of aging on healthcare expenditure (HCE) has been at the center of a prolonged debate. Th...
This paper revisits the debate on the \u27red herring\u27, viz. the claim that population ageing wil...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main cont...
An open issue in the economics literature is whether health care expenditure (HCE) is so concentrate...
The red herring hypothesis contends that the high health care expenditure in old age is caused by pr...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
It has been demonstrated repeatedly that time to death is a much better predictor of health care exp...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...