A quasi-experimental study on health insurance coverage and health services in Nigeria

被引:0
|
作者
Singh, Shailender [1 ]
Kaul, Meenakshi [2 ]
Bala, Muhammad M. [3 ]
Krishnan, Chitra [1 ]
Rawandale, Chandrashekhar J. [2 ]
机构
[1] Symbiosis Int Deemed Univ, Symbiosis Ctr Management Studies, Noida, India
[2] Symbiosis Int Deemed Univ, Symbiosis Law Sch, Pune, India
[3] SRM Univ AP, Sch Liberal Arts & Social Sci, Dept Econ, Amaravati, India
关键词
health insurance coverage; care utilisation; facility delivery; public facilities; private facilities; PROPENSITY SCORE; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.4102/phcfm.v16i1.4056
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: Nigeria has the highest maternal mortality rate among sub-Saharan African countries. Recently, universal health insurance coverage has been embraced as a means to enhance population health in low- and middle-income countries. Hitherto, the effect of health insurance coverage on the utilisation of facility-level delivery is largely unknown in the face of the earnest need to lower maternal mortality rates in developing countries. Aim: To empirically investigate the association of health insurance coverage on health services utilisation of facility-level delivery and the extent to which public- and private-sector facility delivery in Nigeria had a disproportionate associational effect with health insurance coverage, in the universal health coverage era. Setting: A cross-sectional study conducted for Nigeria. Methods: This study employed a quasi-experimental method using propensity scores along with different matching methods that were applied to the most recent wave of Nigeria's Demographic and Health Survey (2020) data. Results: Evidence suggests that childbearing mothers from insured households had an average of 25% probability of utilising facility-level delivery relative to mothers from uninsured households in the year that preceded the survey. Moreover, private-sector facility delivery had a 31% higher associational effect with health insurance coverage than public-sector facility delivery, which had an estimated probability of 21%. Conclusion: Expansion of health insurance coverage in Nigeria will be a desirable way to stimulate the utilisation of facility-level delivery by women of childbearing age. Consequently, coverage expansion has the potential to save many maternal and newborn lives in Nigeria.
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页数:6
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