Synopses & Reviews
Why do some countries have better records for life expectancy and lower rates of disability than other countries? In Health Care Matters, Richard D. Miller Jr. and H. E. Frech III shed new light on this question. This pioneering study shows how health outcomes are affected by the consumption of pharmaceuticals and other health care services as well as several lifestyle factors such as tobacco and alcohol consumption, and obesity. The findings demonstrate that pharmaceutical consumption is more powerful in improving the quality of life than in simply increasing life expectancy. The authors also find that the productivity of pharmaceutical consumption varies greatly by cause of death and by age. For individuals under seventy, pharmaceutical consumption is very helpful in lowering circulatory disease mortality but has little effect on mortality due to either cancer or respiratory disease. At later ages, pharmaceutical consumption is generally productive. Health Care Matters is one of the first studies to use the newly available World Health Organization (WHO) disability-adjusted life expectancy (DALE) data, new international data on obesity, and new data on specific diseases. It also uses a simple econometric model designed to avoid systematic bias in the measurement of productivity. The study features an extensive and readable review of the literature on health measurement--the medical, epidemiological, and economic studies. Health Care Matters will be of interest to students and researchers in health policy and economics who are interested in the measurement of health outcomes and international comparisons of health care systems as well as medical and policy professionals in thepharmaceutical industry and other health policy analysts at trade associations, other think tanks, and government agencies.