Estimating the Marginal Effect of Socioeconomic Factors on the Demand of Specialty Drugs

Hosseini Jebeli, Seyede Sedighe and Barouni, Mohsen and Orojloo, Parvane Heidari and Mehraban, Sattar (2014) Estimating the Marginal Effect of Socioeconomic Factors on the Demand of Specialty Drugs. Global Journal of Health Science, 7 (2). ISSN 1916-9736

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Abstract

Given the growing importance and role of drugs in the treatment of diseases, as well as replacement of them rather than expensive and often unsafe procedures, study of socioeconomicfactors affecting future demand for them seems necessary.we seek to examine the extent of to which socioeconomic factors affect specialty medicine use by the patients.using data from questionnaires completed by 280 patients with multiple sclerosis, hemophilia, thalassemia, and chronic kidney disease, we estimate marginal effect of significant variables in probit model.We found that the need for the patient(ME = 0.858), deterioration of the patient (ME = -0.001), household size (ME = 0.0004), House Ownership (ME = -0.002), gender (ME = -0.04), income (ME = -0.0007), education (ME = -0.0021) and job (ME = -0.0021) are significant variables affecting demand for specialty drugs. We conclude that it can be programmed to promote and protect the welfare of patients by specific factors such as income, and largely affect the demand of medication and medical services. Therefore economic aid to these patients should not be limited only to medical subsidies, especially in patients with MS, income and welfare can reduce drug demand.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Archive Press > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@openarchivepress.com
Date Deposited: 05 May 2023 09:26
Last Modified: 19 Oct 2024 04:16
URI: http://library.2pressrelease.co.in/id/eprint/1114

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