Abstract

National and global health policies are increasingly recognizing the key role of the environment in human health development, which is related to its economic and social determinants, such as income level, technical progress, education, quality of jobs, inequality, education or lifestyle. Research has shown that the increase of GDP (Gross Domestic Product) per capita can provide additional funds for health but also for environmental protection. However, often, economic growth is associated with the accelerated degradation of the environment, and this in turn will result in an exponential increase in harmful emissions and will implicitly determine the increasing occurrence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), mainly cardiovascular diseases, cancers and respiratory diseases. In this paper, we investigate the role and effects of economic growth, environmental pollution and non-communicable diseases on health expenditures, for the case of EU (European Union) countries during 2000–2014. In order to investigate the long-term and the short-term relationship between them, we have employed the Panel Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL) method. Using the Pedroni-Johansen cointegration methods, we found that the variables are cointegrated. The findings of this study show that economic growth is one of the most important factors influencing the health expenditures both in the long- and short-run in all the 28 EU countries. With regards to the influence of CO2 emissions on health expenditure, we have found a negative impact in the short-run and a positive impact on the long-run. We have also introduced an interaction between NCDs and environmental expenditure as independent variable, a product variable. Finally, we have found that in all the three estimated models, the variation in environmental expenditure produces changes in NCDs’ effect on health expenditure.

Highlights

  • The worldwide political priorities concerning health have only recently started to include environmental issues; for a long time, public health and environmental protection have been considered somewhat separate concerns and budget chapters in the activities of governments and local communities [1,2]

  • The article is organized as follows: we provide a quantification of the disease burden and health costs due to environmental degradation and non-communicable diseases (NCDs); in the third section, we review the literature on the influence of air pollution and use of renewable energies on health expenditure; in the fourth section, we present the methodology and sources of data; in the fifth section, we provide the results; in the seventh section we discuss the results; we conclude and present the implications of the study and the limitations

  • In order to detect how variation in environmental expenditure produces changes in NCD’s effect on health expenditure and how variation in NCDs produces changes in environmental expenditure’s effect on health, we have included a product-variable in each model, LnENV x lnNCDs

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Summary

Introduction

The worldwide political priorities concerning health have only recently started to include environmental issues; for a long time, public health and environmental protection have been considered somewhat separate concerns and budget chapters in the activities of governments and local communities [1,2]. Communities and governments have gradually become aware of the importance of understanding the major impact of environmental degradation on human health, as well as the necessity of accurately estimating health costs associated with the quality of the environment. Improving the factors linked to the overall health status of the population Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 5115; doi:10.3390/ijerph16245115 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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