The STRATI Journal of Health Economics is an interdisciplinary, peer reviewed, international journal covering policy and decision-making relating to health economics in the broadest sense. Uniquely, its specific aim is to strengthen health economics research focusing on integration of economics input in health planning, designing, and evaluation and enhancing the competence in health policy analysis. The focus of the STRATI Journal of Health Economics is on health economics and policy analysis. The journal aims to provide a forum for imaginative and creative thinking around the theoretical and empirical foundations of health economics research.
STRATI Journal of Health Economics also welcomes the research papers in the areas of genetic factors, childhood obesity, obesity among children and adolescents, sports participation and physical activity, health of adolescent girls, school nutrition programmes and childhood obesity, obesity in adulthood, costs of food choices and obesity, health care and health insurance, health insurance and weight outcomes, determinants and consequences of cigarette smoking, excessive alcohol use, consumption of illegal drugs, price responsiveness, tax hike and substance use, cigarettes consumption by teenagers and young adults, anti-smoking attitudes and sentiments, prenatal maternal smoking and postnatal environmental smoke, cigarette prices, taxes, and clean indoor air, violent behaviour, risky sexual behaviour by teenagers and young adults, alcohol taxes and alcohol consumption, mortality, public policy interventions and health benefits.
The contribution to the STRATI Journal of Health Economics should also focus on chronic drug use, illegal drug use by pregnant women, consequences for the health of their infants, formal schooling and health, parental education and child health outcomes, education and health risk and healthier behaviours, maternal mortality, female life expectancy, health insurance and health outcomes, prenatal medical care, newborn deliveries, neonatal care, and medical care services, post-neonatal mortality and health insurance, influence of cultural and behavioural factors, economic decline and health, climate change and health, economic expansion and job stress, reproductive behaviour, maternal nutrition and infant health outcomes, and policy analysis.
The contribution to the STRATI Journal of Health Economics should broadly focus on following themes (but are not restricted to):
- Health care financing and insurance
- Health systems performance
- Public health economics
- Cost-effectiveness and health technology assessment
- Health inequalities and access
- Behavioral health economics
- Pandemic and disaster health responses
- Global health and development
- Pharmaceuticals and pricing
- Health workforce and infrastructure
- Health policy
- Health expenditure
- Universal health coverage
- Cost-benefit analysis
- Health insurance
- Health outcomes
- Public health interventions
- Health equity
- Health systems
- Medical costs
- Preventive health
- Disease burden
- Global health economics
Send your paper to Email: strat.institute@gmail.com