It has been demonstrated repeatedly that time to death is a much better predictor of health care expenditures than age. This is known as the ‘red herring’ hypothesis. In this article, we investigate whether this is also the case regarding disease-specific hospital expenditures. Longitudinal data samples from the Dutch hospital register (n=11¿253¿455) were used to estimate 94 disease-specific two-part models. Based on these models, Monte Carlo simulations were used to assess the predictive value of proximity to death and age on disease-specific expenditures. Results revealed that there was a clear effect of proximity of death on health care expenditures. This effect was present for most diseases and was strongest for most cancers. However, e...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main cont...
Health expenditure depends heavily on age. Common wisdom is that the age pattern is dominated by cos...
It has been demonstrated repeatedly that time to death is a much better predictor of health care exp...
Recent studies indicate that approaching death, rather than age, may be the main demographic driver ...
Research has shown that older individuals are far more likely to avail of health care and there is c...
This paper revisits the debate on the red herring, viz. the claim that population ageing will not ha...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
The ‘red herring’ hypothesis (RHH) claims that apart from income and medical technology, proximity t...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
Abstract Background Health care expenditures (HCE) are known to steepen with increasing age, but the...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...
It is important for health policy and expenditure projections to understand the relationship between...
An open issue in the economics literature is whether health care expenditure (HCE) is so concentrate...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main cont...
Health expenditure depends heavily on age. Common wisdom is that the age pattern is dominated by cos...
It has been demonstrated repeatedly that time to death is a much better predictor of health care exp...
Recent studies indicate that approaching death, rather than age, may be the main demographic driver ...
Research has shown that older individuals are far more likely to avail of health care and there is c...
This paper revisits the debate on the red herring, viz. the claim that population ageing will not ha...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
The ‘red herring’ hypothesis (RHH) claims that apart from income and medical technology, proximity t...
The observation that average health care expenditure rises with age generally leads experts and laym...
Abstract Background Health care expenditures (HCE) are known to steepen with increasing age, but the...
Studies on the effect of ageing on health care expenditures (HCE) have revealed the importance of co...
It is important for health policy and expenditure projections to understand the relationship between...
An open issue in the economics literature is whether health care expenditure (HCE) is so concentrate...
This paper uses Hospital Episode Statistics, English administrative data, to investigate the growth ...
In this paper we test the 'red herring' hypothesis for expenditures on long-term care. The main cont...
Health expenditure depends heavily on age. Common wisdom is that the age pattern is dominated by cos...