Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres

This paper examines whether different approaches for estimating the technical efficiency of a primary healthcare centre —PHC— can have significantly different results. Although effective regulation demands the development of measures for establishing good operation levels, few studies have compared...

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Main Authors: Martha Ramírez-Valdivia, Sergio Maturana, Jennifer Mendoza-Alonzo, Jaime Bustos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2015-07-01
Series:International Journal of Engineering Business Management
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5772/60839
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spelling doaj-e8e15cbba7674634a50d4815595aea112021-04-02T12:54:20ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Engineering Business Management1847-97902015-07-01710.5772/6083948804Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare CentresMartha Ramírez-Valdivia0Sergio Maturana1Jennifer Mendoza-Alonzo2Jaime Bustos3 Universidad de La Frontera, Chile Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Chile Universidad de Los Lagos, Chile Universidad de La Frontera, ChileThis paper examines whether different approaches for estimating the technical efficiency of a primary healthcare centre —PHC— can have significantly different results. Although effective regulation demands the development of measures for establishing good operation levels, few studies have compared results from a data envelopment analysis —DEA— and stochastic frontier analysis —SFA—in a PHC. Furthermore, to the best of our knowledge, no studies have used Chilean nationwide data. Efficiency refers to the relation between the number of output units per input unit. Effectiveness evaluates the outcome of medical care and can be influenced by efficiency. The data that were used in this study came from 259 Chilean municipalities. We included two outputs – medical and check-up visits – and three inputs – staff, general service and drugs expenses. For the DEA, we used a variable return to scale output-oriented model. Before applying the SFA, a principal component analysis —PCA— combined the two outputs. The results were similar for both methods: the SFA efficiency averages were 70.89% and 65.83% and the DEA averages were 68.37% and 54.46% for the urban and rural municipalities, respectively. In addition to defining a frontier of “best practice”, this study merged the PCA with the SFA to form an innovative approach to combining outputs.https://doi.org/10.5772/60839
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martha Ramírez-Valdivia
Sergio Maturana
Jennifer Mendoza-Alonzo
Jaime Bustos
spellingShingle Martha Ramírez-Valdivia
Sergio Maturana
Jennifer Mendoza-Alonzo
Jaime Bustos
Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres
International Journal of Engineering Business Management
author_facet Martha Ramírez-Valdivia
Sergio Maturana
Jennifer Mendoza-Alonzo
Jaime Bustos
author_sort Martha Ramírez-Valdivia
title Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres
title_short Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres
title_full Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres
title_fullStr Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres
title_full_unstemmed Measuring the Efficiency of Chilean Primary Healthcare Centres
title_sort measuring the efficiency of chilean primary healthcare centres
publisher SAGE Publishing
series International Journal of Engineering Business Management
issn 1847-9790
publishDate 2015-07-01
description This paper examines whether different approaches for estimating the technical efficiency of a primary healthcare centre —PHC— can have significantly different results. Although effective regulation demands the development of measures for establishing good operation levels, few studies have compared results from a data envelopment analysis —DEA— and stochastic frontier analysis —SFA—in a PHC. Furthermore, to the best of our knowledge, no studies have used Chilean nationwide data. Efficiency refers to the relation between the number of output units per input unit. Effectiveness evaluates the outcome of medical care and can be influenced by efficiency. The data that were used in this study came from 259 Chilean municipalities. We included two outputs – medical and check-up visits – and three inputs – staff, general service and drugs expenses. For the DEA, we used a variable return to scale output-oriented model. Before applying the SFA, a principal component analysis —PCA— combined the two outputs. The results were similar for both methods: the SFA efficiency averages were 70.89% and 65.83% and the DEA averages were 68.37% and 54.46% for the urban and rural municipalities, respectively. In addition to defining a frontier of “best practice”, this study merged the PCA with the SFA to form an innovative approach to combining outputs.
url https://doi.org/10.5772/60839
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