Abstract

BackgroundThe Brazilian public health system is one of the largest health systems in the world, with a mandate to deliver medical care to more than 200 million Brazilians. The objective of this study is to estimate a production function for primary care in urban Brazil. Our goal is to use flexible estimates to identify heterogeneous returns and complementarities between medical capital and labor.MethodsWe use a large dataset from 2012 to 2016 (with more than 400 million consultations, 270 thousand physicians, and 11 thousand clinics) to nonparametrically estimate a primary care production function and calculate the elasticity of doctors’ visits (output) to two inputs: capital stock (number of clinics) and labor (number of physicians). We benchmark our nonparametric estimates against estimates of a Cobb-Douglas (CD) production function. The CD model was chosen as a baseline because it is arguably the most popular parametric production function model. By comparing our nonparametric results with those from the CD model, our paper shed some light on the limitations of the parametric approach, and on the novelty of nonparametric insights.ResultsThe nonparametric results show significantly heterogeneity of returns to both capital and labor, depending on the scale of operation. We find that diseconomies of scale, diminishing returns to scale, and increasing returns to scale are possible, depending on the input range.ConclusionsThe nonparametric model identifies complementarities between capital and labor, which is essential in designing efficient policy interventions. For example, we find that the response of primary care consultations to labor is steeper when capital level is high. This means that, if the goal is to allocate labor to maximize increases in consultations, adding physicians in cities with a high number of clinics is preferred to allocating physicians to low medical infrastructure municipalities. The results highlight how the CD model hides useful policy information by not accounting for the heterogeneity in the data.

Highlights

  • The Brazilian public health system is one of the largest health systems in the world, with a mandate to deliver medical care to more than 200 million Brazilians

  • We find that primary care delivery increases by less than the proportional increase in both medical capital infrastructure and labor requirements

  • The graphs in left column show the counterfactual exercise of displaying output prediction as a function of capital, holding labor fixed at the 25th quantile (PANEL a), 50th quantile (PANEL b), and 75th quantile (PANEL c)

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Summary

Introduction

The Brazilian public health system is one of the largest health systems in the world, with a mandate to deliver medical care to more than 200 million Brazilians. The WHO recognizes that health systems based on primary health care are of paramount importance in achieving sustainable health goals. This architecture is especially important in developing countries, where primary care systems often need to be further developed. WHO works with many countries to implement primary health care policies that integrate health-promoting and preventive interventions thereby reducing health care delivery costs and improving efficiency through lower hospital admissions. Lobo et al examine a sample of 104 Brazilian teaching hospitals finding similar results; only 5% of the hospitals efficiently allocate resources [4]

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