Socio-economic and environmental factors influenced the united nations healthcare sustainable agenda: evidence from a panel of selected Asian and African countries

The objective of the study is to evaluate socio-economic and environmental factors that influenced the United Nations healthcare sustainable agenda in a panel of 21 Asian and African countries. The results show that changes in price level (0.0062, p < 0.000), life risks of maternal death (4.579,...

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Main Authors: Saleem, Hummera, Jiandong, Wen, Mohammed Aldakhil, Abdullah, A. Nassani, Abdelmohsen, Qazi Abro, Muhammad Moinuddin, Zaman, Khalid, Khan, Aqeel, Hassan, Zainudin, Mohd. Rameli, Mohd. Rustam
Format: Article
Published: Springer Verlag 2019
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/87702/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-019-04692-3
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
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Summary:The objective of the study is to evaluate socio-economic and environmental factors that influenced the United Nations healthcare sustainable agenda in a panel of 21 Asian and African countries. The results show that changes in price level (0.0062, p < 0.000), life risks of maternal death (4.579, p < 0.000), and under-5 mortality rate (0.374, p < 0.000) substantially increases out-of-pocket health expenditures, while CO 2 emissions (5.681, p < 0.003), prevalence of undernourishment (15.184, p < 0.000), PM 2.5 particulate emission (1557, p < 0.000), unemployment, and private health expenditures (30.729, p < 0000) are associated with high mortality rate across countries. Healthcare reforms affected by low healthcare spending, unsustainable environment, and ease of environmental regulations that ultimately increases mortality rate across countries. The Granger causality estimates confirmed the different causal mechanisms between socio-economic and environmental factors, which is directly linked with the country’s healthcare agenda, i.e., the causality running from (i) CO 2 emissions to life risks of maternal death and under-5 mortality rate, (ii) from depth of food deficit to incidence of tuberculosis and unemployment, (iii) from PM 2.5 emissions to infant mortality rate, (iv) from foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows to PM 2.5 emissions, (v) from trade openness to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and (vi) from mortality indicators to per capita income, while there is a feedback relationship between health expenditures and per capita income across countries. The variance decomposition analysis shows that (i) under-5 mortality rate will increase out-of-pocket health expenditures, (ii) unemployment rate will increase mortality indicators, and (iii) health expenditures will increase economic well-being in a panel of selected countries, for the next 10 years.