The implication of health insurance for child development and maternal nutrition: evidence from China

被引:0
|
作者
Xiaobo Peng
Dalton Conley
机构
[1] Chinese Academy of Social Sciences,Graduate School, Institute of Economics
[2] New York University,Department of Sociology
来源
The European Journal of Health Economics | 2016年 / 17卷
关键词
NCMS; Health; Nutrition; C13; I12; I18;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We use the implementation of the new rural cooperative medical scheme (NCMS) in China to investigate the effect of health insurance on maternal nutrition and child health. Given the uneven roll-out of the NCMS across rural counties, we are able to deploy its implementation as a natural experiment in order to obviate problems of adverse selection that typically plague research on the effects of health insurance. We find that, among children, the NCMS has the greatest positive effect on infants between birth and 5 years of age. Also, with respect to female nutritional status, our models show that the NCMS has the greatest effect on women of childbearing age (aged between 16 and 35), indicating that women who benefit from the NCMS benefits may, in turn, give birth to healthier babies. Thus, taken together, our findings indicate that the NCMS plays an important role in health dynamics in rural China.
引用
收藏
页码:521 / 534
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The implication of health insurance for child development and maternal nutrition: evidence from China
    Peng, Xiaobo
    Conley, Dalton
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2016, 17 (05) : 521 - 534
  • [2] TREND OF MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH AND NUTRITION INDICATORS IN KENYA: IMPLICATION FOR POLICY DEVELOPMENT
    Makokha, Anselimo
    ANNALS OF NUTRITION AND METABOLISM, 2017, 71 : 742 - 742
  • [3] Migration and young child nutrition: evidence from rural China
    Mu, Ren
    Brauw, Alan de
    JOURNAL OF POPULATION ECONOMICS, 2015, 28 (03) : 631 - 657
  • [4] Nutrition and maternal, neonatal, and child health
    Christian, Parul
    Mullany, Luke C.
    Hurley, Kristen M.
    Katz, Joanne
    Black, Robert E.
    SEMINARS IN PERINATOLOGY, 2015, 39 (05) : 361 - 372
  • [5] Maternal autonomy and child nutrition Evidence from rural Nepal
    Dancer, Diane
    Rammohan, Anu
    INDIAN GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, 2009, 2 (01) : 18 - 38
  • [6] Migration and young child nutrition: evidence from rural China
    Ren Mu
    Alan de Brauw
    Journal of Population Economics, 2015, 28 : 631 - 657
  • [7] Mainstrearning nutrition in maternal, newborn and child health: barriers to seeking services from existing maternal, newborn, child health programmes
    Streatfield, Peter K.
    Koehimoos, Tracey R.
    Alarn, Nurul
    Mridha, Malay K.
    MATERNAL AND CHILD NUTRITION, 2008, 4 : 237 - 255
  • [8] Maternal education and child health: Causal evidence from Denmark
    Arendt, Jacob Nielsen
    Christensen, Mads Lybech
    Hjorth-Trolle, Anders
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2021, 80
  • [9] Maternal empowerment, feeding knowledge, and infant nutrition: Evidence from rural China
    Chen, Yunwei
    Guo, Yian
    Wu, Yuju
    Medina, Alexis
    Zhou, Huan
    Darmstadt, Gary L.
    JOURNAL OF GLOBAL HEALTH, 2024, 14
  • [10] Does maternal employment affect child nutrition status? New evidence from Egypt
    Rashad, Ahmed Shoukry
    Sharaf, Mesbah Fathy
    OXFORD DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2019, 47 (01) : 48 - 62