Impact of Health Insurance on Health Care Utilization in Vietnam

Impact of Health Insurance on Health Care Utilization in Vietnam

Author: Xiaodong Cai.

Publisher:

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 113

ISBN-13: 9781109995886

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Objectives. The current study aimed at investigating the impact of health insurance programs on health care utilization in terms of curative outpatient care utilization, preference of public provider for curative outpatient care and preventive care utilization.


Moving Toward Universal Coverage of Social Health Insurance in Vietnam

Moving Toward Universal Coverage of Social Health Insurance in Vietnam

Author: Aparnaa Somanathan

Publisher: World Bank Publications

Published: 2014-07-07

Total Pages: 177

ISBN-13: 1464802610

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Over the past two decades Vietnam has made enormous progress to expand health insurance coverage to its population. Further progress will require significant additional public financing, as well as efforts improve efficiency and strengthen insurance organization and management. It contains recommendations and next steps for Vietnam to follow.


Health Insurance for the Poor

Health Insurance for the Poor

Author: Adam Wagstaff

Publisher: World Bank Publications

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 33

ISBN-13:

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Vietnam's Health Care Fund for the Poor (HCFP) uses government revenues to finance health care for the poor, ethnic minorities living in selected mountainous provinces designated as difficult, and all households living in communes officially designated as highly disadvantaged. The program, which started in 2003, did not as of 2004 include all these groups, but those who were included (about 15 percent of the population) were disproportionately poor. Estimates of the program's impact-obtained using single differences and propensity score matching on a trimmed sample-suggest that HCFP has substantially increased service utilization, especially in-patient care, and has reduced the risk of catastrophic spending. It has not, however, reduced average out-of-pocket spending, and appears to have had negligible impacts on utilization among the poorest decile.


Health Insurance Impacts on Health and Nonmedical Consumption in a Developing Country

Health Insurance Impacts on Health and Nonmedical Consumption in a Developing Country

Author: Adam Wagstaff

Publisher: World Bank Publications

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 27

ISBN-13:

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The authors examine the effects of the introduction of Vietnam's health insurance (VHI) program on health outcomes, health care utilization, and non-medical household consumption. The use of panel data collected before and after the insurance program's introduction allows them to eliminate any confounding effects due to selection on time-invariant un-observables, and their coupling of propensity score matching with a double-difference estimator allows them to reduce the risk of biases due to inappropriate specification of the outcome regression model. The authors' results suggest that Vietnam's health insurance program impacted favorably on height-for-age and weight-for-age of young school children, and on body mass index among adults. Their results suggest that among young children, VHI increases use of primary care facilities and leads to a substitution away from the use of pharmacists as a source of advice and non-prescribed medicines toward the use of them as a supplier of medicines prescribed by a health professional. Among older children and adults, VHI results in a marked increase in the use of hospital inpatient and outpatient departments. The results also suggest that VHI causes a reduction in annual out-of-pocket expenditures on health and an increase in non-medical household consumption, including food consumption, but mostly nonfood consumption. The authors' estimate of the VHI-induced reduction in out-of-pocket health spending is considerably smaller than their estimate.


Vietnamese Health Care System in Change

Vietnamese Health Care System in Change

Author: Kerstin Priwitzer

Publisher: Flipside Digital Content Company Inc.

Published: 2003-08-01

Total Pages: 245

ISBN-13: 9814515825

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Within the last twenty years a large-scale bottom-up privatization has taken place in Vietnam, changing and dismantling the public health care system. This process has led to severe tensions inherent in the transitional society of Vietnam between equity and access to health care support - especially for the poor, elderly, migrants, and ethnic minorities - on the one hand, and its efficiency on the other hand. The book traces the reform efforts to modernize the health care system by the Communist Party of Vietnam and the Vietnamese government. The author bases her findings on little known primary literature and interviews with key stakeholders of the policy network involved in the reform of the health care system, thereby painting an authentic atmospheric picture of the profound changes in the health care system in Vietnam.


The Impact of Health Insurance for Children Under Age 6 in Vietnam

The Impact of Health Insurance for Children Under Age 6 in Vietnam

Author: Michael Palmer

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Accessing health services at an early age is important to future health and life outcomes. Yet, little is currently known on the role of health insurance in facilitating access to care for children. Exploiting a regression discontinuity design made possible through a policy to provide health insurance to pre-school aged children in Vietnam, this paper evaluates the impact of health insurance on the health care utilization outcomes of children at the eligibility threshold of six years. Using three rounds of the Vietnam Household Living Standards Survey, the study finds a positive impact on inpatient and outpatient visits and no significant impact on expenditures per visit at public facilities. We find moderately high use of private outpatient services and no evidence of a switch from private to covered public facilities under insurance. Results suggest that adopting public health insurance programs for children under age 6 may be an important vehicle to improving service utilization in a low- and middle-income country context. Challenges remain in providing adequate protections from the costs and other barriers to care.


Health Insurance Impacts on Health and Nonmedical Consumption in a Developing Country

Health Insurance Impacts on Health and Nonmedical Consumption in a Developing Country

Author: Adam Wagstaff

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 27

ISBN-13:

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The authors examine the effects of the introduction of Vietnam`s health insurance (VHI) program on health outcomes, health care utilization, and non-medical household consumption. The use of panel data collected before and after the insurance program`s introduction allows them to eliminate any confounding effects due to selection on time-invariant un-observables, and their coupling of propensity score matching with a double-difference estimator allows them to reduce the risk of biases due to inappropriate specification of the outcome regression model. The authors`results suggest that Vietnam`s health insurance program impacted favorably on height-for-age and weight-for-age of young school children, and on body mass index among adults. Their results suggest that among young children, VHI increases use of primary care facilities and leads to a substitution away from the use of pharmacists as a source of advice and non-prescribed medicines toward the use of them as a supplier of medicines prescribed by a health professional. Among older children and adults, VHI results in a marked increase in the use of hospital inpatient and outpatient departments. The results also suggest that VHI causes a reduction in annual out-of-pocket expenditures on health and an increase in non-medical household consumption, including food consumption, but mostly nonfood consumption. The authors`estimate of the VHI-induced reduction in out-of-pocket health spending is considerably smaller than their estimate of the VHI-induced increase in non-medical consumption, which is consistent with the idea that households hold back their consumption considerably if, through lack of health insurance, they are exposed to the risk of large out-of-pocket expenditures. This is especially plausible in a country where at the time (1993), a single visit to a public hospital cost on average the equivalent of 20 percent of a person`s annual nonfood consumption.


Analysis on Demand- and Supply-Side Responses During the Expansion of Health Insurance Coverage in Vietnam

Analysis on Demand- and Supply-Side Responses During the Expansion of Health Insurance Coverage in Vietnam

Author: Midori Matsushima

Publisher:

Published: 2020

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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This study examines how the demand and supply of healthcare services have responded to the expansion of health insurance coverage in Vietnam by using biyearly provincial panel data from 2006 to 2014. The results of our analysis indicate significant progress towards universal health coverage (UHC) in Vietnam, with the expansion of health insurance coverage being accompanied by increases in admissions and inpatient days. However, some concerns remain. Our findings show a positive response of supply capacity only in terms of doctors and nurses at higher-level hospitals (provincial hospitals), and none in other relevant aspects. Moreover, we find no positive response of the number of outpatient visits. Another concern is the issue of financial protection. The decline in out-of-pocket payments is not significant throughout our observation period, suggesting that lowering the cost of healthcare is not straightforward and that the expansion of health insurance coverage alone cannot achieve this. We believe that the Vietnamese experience has valuable implications for other emerging and developing countries, considering that the expansion of health insurance coverage is likely to increase utilization of healthcare services significantly and that the supply side needs to be prepared for the increase.