Household Catastrophic Health Expenditure And Its Determinants In Pakistan

Authors

  • Saif Ullah, Dr. Abdur Rehman, Dr. Muhammad Niamat Ullah Khan Babar, Dr. Muhammad Suleman and Muhammad Waqar

Abstract

This paper looks at how much money Pakistani families spend on health issues. Using data from PSLM for the years 2018–19. It investigates the components and variables that influence how much money families spend on different health diseases. The estimation results show that the cost of a family's catastrophic expenditure varies depending on a number of factors, including the nature of diseases, people living in different provinces, the location[1] either urban or rural, employment status of the households, marital status and type of service provider for curing the disease. Health expenditure is also affected by an increase in income and in the number of family size. Such factors drives an increase or decrease in household health spending. However, policy recommendations for health expenditure are influenced positively by ends in light of all factors. In addition, any revelation may infer a wide range of health implications in Pakistan. Each of these factors play a specific role that how the government decides how much money to spend in health sector. Regression analysis and the ordinary least squares (OLS) method were used to carry out the regression. When a model's dependent variable is quantitative, then this method and technique are applied in specified situation. The policy and a solution to all the problems that can be explained by the variables and household health spending will be achieved through estimates and outcomes.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Downloads

Published

2024-06-03

How to Cite

Saif Ullah, Dr. Abdur Rehman, Dr. Muhammad Niamat Ullah Khan Babar, Dr. Muhammad Suleman and Muhammad Waqar. (2024). Household Catastrophic Health Expenditure And Its Determinants In Pakistan. Migration Letters, 21(S11), 1566–1576. Retrieved from https://migrationletters.com/index.php/ml/article/view/11152

Issue

Section

Articles