Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations
Informal patient payments are a widespread phenomenon in post-communist countries. In order to identify who is more likely to make informal payments in East-Central Europe, a 2013 survey is used. Reporting data from Special Eurobarometer No. 397 (‘Corruption’), the finding is that patients in Hungar...
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Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi
2016-06-01
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doaj-c06ba68cd59841baaf1726f7b3db05712020-11-24T22:45:23ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of IasiEastern Journal of European Studies2068-651X2068-66332016-06-01714961Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variationsColin WILLIAMS0Ioana HORODNIC1Adrian HORODNIC2University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United KingdomAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi, Romaniaadrian-vasile.horodnic@d.umfiasi.roInformal patient payments are a widespread phenomenon in post-communist countries. In order to identify who is more likely to make informal payments in East-Central Europe, a 2013 survey is used. Reporting data from Special Eurobarometer No. 397 (‘Corruption’), the finding is that patients in Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Romania are significantly more likely to make extra informal payments or to give valuable gifts to medical practitioners or to make a hospital donation additional to the official fees. Women are more likely to make informal payments for healthcare services whilst unemployed patients or those never or almost never having difficulties in paying bills are less likely to make informal payments. The implications of the findings are then explored, displaying the population groups and spaces that need targeting when seeking to tackle informal patient payments.http://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2016_0701_WIL.pdfinformal paymentsinformal patient paymentsEast-Central Europesocio-economic variationshealth policy |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Colin WILLIAMS Ioana HORODNIC Adrian HORODNIC |
spellingShingle |
Colin WILLIAMS Ioana HORODNIC Adrian HORODNIC Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations Eastern Journal of European Studies informal payments informal patient payments East-Central Europe socio-economic variations health policy |
author_facet |
Colin WILLIAMS Ioana HORODNIC Adrian HORODNIC |
author_sort |
Colin WILLIAMS |
title |
Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations |
title_short |
Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations |
title_full |
Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations |
title_fullStr |
Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations |
title_full_unstemmed |
Who is making informal payments for public healthcare in East-Central Europe? An evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations |
title_sort |
who is making informal payments for public healthcare in east-central europe? an evaluation of socio-economic and spatial variations |
publisher |
Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi |
series |
Eastern Journal of European Studies |
issn |
2068-651X 2068-6633 |
publishDate |
2016-06-01 |
description |
Informal patient payments are a widespread phenomenon in post-communist countries. In order to identify who is more likely to make informal payments in East-Central Europe, a 2013 survey is used. Reporting data from Special Eurobarometer No. 397 (‘Corruption’), the finding is that patients in Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Romania are significantly more likely to make extra informal payments or to give valuable gifts to medical practitioners or to make a hospital donation additional to the official fees. Women are more likely to make informal payments for healthcare services whilst unemployed patients or those never or almost never having difficulties in paying bills are less likely to make informal payments. The implications of the findings are then explored, displaying the population groups and spaces that need targeting when seeking to tackle informal patient payments. |
topic |
informal payments informal patient payments East-Central Europe socio-economic variations health policy |
url |
http://ejes.uaic.ro/articles/EJES2016_0701_WIL.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT colinwilliams whoismakinginformalpaymentsforpublichealthcareineastcentraleuropeanevaluationofsocioeconomicandspatialvariations AT ioanahorodnic whoismakinginformalpaymentsforpublichealthcareineastcentraleuropeanevaluationofsocioeconomicandspatialvariations AT adrianhorodnic whoismakinginformalpaymentsforpublichealthcareineastcentraleuropeanevaluationofsocioeconomicandspatialvariations |
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