Healthcare Economics - Scarcity & Sense
- Scarcity: Core issue; unlimited health needs vs. finite resources (funds, staff, tech). Necessitates choices.
- Opportunity Cost: Value of the next best alternative forgone when a choice is made (e.g., funding Program X over Program Y).
- Key Concepts:
- Demand: Often price inelastic (essential need); influenced by insurance, income, health status.
- Supply: Affected by training capacity, infrastructure, technology, regulations.
- Efficiency:
- Allocative: Maximizing societal health outcomes with available resources.
- Productive (Technical): Minimizing cost per unit of healthcare provided.
- Equity: Fair distribution of healthcare services and access (Horizontal vs. Vertical).
- Market Failures: Common in healthcare; e.g., information asymmetry, externalities (herd immunity from vaccination), moral hazard.

⭐ Information Asymmetry: A significant market failure where healthcare providers typically possess more clinical information than patients, potentially influencing patient choices and leading to inefficient care.
Healthcare Markets - Invisible Hand Hiccups
Adam Smith's "invisible hand" posits that individual self-interest in free markets benefits society. However, healthcare markets often "hiccup" due to unique characteristics leading to inefficiencies.
- Key Market Failures:
- Information Asymmetry: Patients lack medical knowledge compared to providers.
⭐ Information asymmetry is a primary driver of market failure, empowering providers and potentially leading to over-treatment.
- Externalities:
- Positive: Vaccination benefits community.
- Negative: Antibiotic overuse leads to resistance.
- Moral Hazard: Insurance may ↑ risky behavior or ↑ service use.
- Adverse Selection: Sicker individuals disproportionately seek insurance.
- Supplier-Induced Demand (SID): Physicians can influence patient demand.
- Public Goods: Aspects like sanitation, disease surveillance.
- Information Asymmetry: Patients lack medical knowledge compared to providers.

Health Financing - India's Health Purse
- Core Funding Streams:
- Public Expenditure: Central & State Govts (NHM, PM-JAY).
- Private Expenditure: Mainly Out-of-Pocket (OOPE); private insurance.
- External Aid & NGOs.
- Flagship Govt. Initiatives:
- Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY): World's largest scheme; >10 crore families; ₹5 lakh/family/year for 2°/3° care.
- National Health Mission (NHM): Strengthens PHCs; RMNCH+A.
- ESIS: For formal sector employees.
- Key Challenges & Figures:
- High OOPE: ~48% of Total Health Expenditure (THE).
- Low Public Health Spend: ~1.35% GDP (Target: 2.5% by NHP 2017).
⭐ Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) is the largest share of India's Total Health Expenditure (THE), a major cause of medical debt.
Economic Evaluation - Bang For Buck MD
Systematic comparison of costs and consequences of healthcare interventions to assess value for money. (13 words) Four main types: (3 words)
- Cost-Minimization Analysis (CMA):
- Health outcomes of interventions are proven equivalent. (7 words)
- Selects the least costly alternative. (5 words)
- Cost-Effectiveness Analysis (CEA):
- Compares interventions with outcomes in natural units (e.g., life-years gained, BP reduction). (12 words)
- Metric: Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio (ICER) = $\frac{\Delta Cost}{\Delta Effect}$. (6 words)
- Cost-Utility Analysis (CUA):
- A form of CEA; outcomes measured in Quality-Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) or DALYs. (13 words)
- Metric: ICER = $\frac{\Delta Cost}{\Delta QALY}$. (4 words)
- Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA):
- Values both costs and health benefits in monetary units. (8 words)
- Results: Net Benefit or Benefit-Cost Ratio. (6 words)


⭐ ICER (Incremental Cost-Effectiveness Ratio) is a key metric in CEA/CUA, representing the additional cost per additional unit of health outcome (e.g., per QALY gained). (26 words)
Total text word count: 13 + 3 + 7 + 5 + 12 + 6 + 13 + 4 + 8 + 6 + 26 = 103 words
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY): World's largest health assurance scheme, vital for India.
- NHP 2017 targets Universal Health Coverage (UHC) & public health spend at 2.5% of GDP.
- High Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOP) is a major challenge in Indian healthcare financing.
- Economic evaluations (CBA, CEA, CUA) guide efficient resource allocation in health.
- Moral Hazard & Adverse Selection are key issues impacting health insurance markets.
- Opportunity Cost: Value of the next best alternative foregone in healthcare decisions_
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