Regional inequalities and substitutability of health resources in the Czech Republic: a five methods of evaluation

Hum Resour Health. 2021 Jul 17;19(1):89. doi: 10.1186/s12960-021-00630-y.

Abstract

Background: An analysis of the regional distribution of health resources is one of the tools for evaluating equal geographic access to health care. The usual analytical approach to an assessment of regional differences is to evaluate each health resource separately. This is a sensible approach, because there may be systematic reasons for any differences, for example, higher salaries in urban areas. However, a separate evaluation of the regional distribution of health resource capacities may be misleading. We should evaluate all health resource capacities as a whole and consider the substitutability of resources.

Objective: This study aims to measure regional inequalities in the Czech Republic with the help of alternative approaches to the evaluation of regional inequalities in the case of several substitutable health resources.

Methods: Five alternative evaluation methods (models) are described and applied: the separate evaluation, expert model, market model, common weights model, and production frontier model.

Results: The regional distribution of physicians and nurses in the Czech Republic in 2017 was evaluated. In spite of many regulations at the national and regional levels, we have found inequalities in regional resource distribution. The models that consider all health resources and the possibility of a resource substitution show lower inequalities between regional health resource capacities.

Conclusion: Both researchers and policy-makers should always consider the possibility of resource substitutions in the assessment of regional inequalities.

Keywords: Common weights model; Czech Republic; Data envelopment analysis; Inequality measures; Production frontier model; Regional inequality.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Czech Republic
  • Delivery of Health Care*
  • Health Resources*
  • Humans