There is a perception that population ageing will have deleterious effects on future health financing sustainability. We propose a new method—the Population Ageing financial Sustainability gap for Health systems (or alternatively, the PASH)—to explore how changes in the population age mix will affect health expenditures and revenues. Using a set of six anonymized country scenarios that are based on data from countries in Europe and the Western Pacific representing a diverse range of health financing systems, we forecast the size of the ageing-attributable gap between health revenues and expenditures from 2020 to 2100 under current health financing arrangements. In the country with the largest financing gap in 2100 (country S6) the majority ...
Context The healthy ageing assumptions may lead to substantial changes in paths of aggregate healthc...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
Over the past thirty years, health expenditure has grown at a faster rate than the economy in almost...
There is a perception that population ageing will have deleterious effects on future health financin...
In the past several decades a new challenge has arisen, and it refers to the rapid demographic agein...
To what extent can rising per capita health expenditures be attributed to the changing age compositi...
This document analyses the effects of ageing populations upon public finances. More specifically, it...
During the last thirty years health care expenditure (HCE) has been growing much more rapidly than G...
Populations around the world are getting older. This is hap- pening due to a combination of lower fe...
This document analyses the effects of ageing populations upon public finances. More specifically, it...
In this paper we evaluate the respective effects of demographic change, changes in morbidity and cha...
Growing healthcare expenditure is of major concern for the sustainability of public finances. In ord...
AbstractThe share of the population aged 60 and over is projected to increase in nearly every countr...
An ageing population and expected future increases in the demand for long-term care services are imp...
The health systems we enjoy today, and expected medical advances in the future, will be difficult to...
Context The healthy ageing assumptions may lead to substantial changes in paths of aggregate healthc...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
Over the past thirty years, health expenditure has grown at a faster rate than the economy in almost...
There is a perception that population ageing will have deleterious effects on future health financin...
In the past several decades a new challenge has arisen, and it refers to the rapid demographic agein...
To what extent can rising per capita health expenditures be attributed to the changing age compositi...
This document analyses the effects of ageing populations upon public finances. More specifically, it...
During the last thirty years health care expenditure (HCE) has been growing much more rapidly than G...
Populations around the world are getting older. This is hap- pening due to a combination of lower fe...
This document analyses the effects of ageing populations upon public finances. More specifically, it...
In this paper we evaluate the respective effects of demographic change, changes in morbidity and cha...
Growing healthcare expenditure is of major concern for the sustainability of public finances. In ord...
AbstractThe share of the population aged 60 and over is projected to increase in nearly every countr...
An ageing population and expected future increases in the demand for long-term care services are imp...
The health systems we enjoy today, and expected medical advances in the future, will be difficult to...
Context The healthy ageing assumptions may lead to substantial changes in paths of aggregate healthc...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
Over the past thirty years, health expenditure has grown at a faster rate than the economy in almost...