Efficiency of Public Sector District Hospitals of India: A Data-envelopment Analysis
Aarti Goyal, Gaurav Jyani, Shankar PrinjaAbstract
Background:
District hospitals are integral part of India’s public healthcare delivery system, yet national-level assessment of their efficiency is lacking.
Objectives:
This research assesses the technical efficiency of district hospitals in India and identifies key determinants influencing their performance.
Materials and Methods:
Data envelopment analysis was utilized to measure the efficiency scores of district hospitals. The estimates of input and output variables from district hospitals were sourced from the primary data comprising 27 district hospitals across nine Indian states. Input variables included human resources for health, physical medical infrastructure, and the economic value of all other resources consumed to deliver health services, whereas the output variables comprised hospital workload indicators such as number of hospitalizations, surgeries, and outpatient episodes. Tobit regression investigated the factors influencing hospital efficiency.
Results:
85.2% of the district hospitals (
Conclusion:
Most district hospitals are performing efficiently; thus, increasing output would require a higher budget. Progress toward universal health coverage necessitates either enhanced inputs or more district hospitals.