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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2018 May:204:51-58.
doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.03.024. Epub 2018 Mar 17.

Does health insurance coverage or improved quality protect better against out-of-pocket payments? Experimental evidence from the Philippines

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Does health insurance coverage or improved quality protect better against out-of-pocket payments? Experimental evidence from the Philippines

Natascha Wagner et al. Soc Sci Med. 2018 May.

Abstract

This paper explores whether health insurance coverage or improved quality at the hospital level protect better against out-of-pocket payments. Using data from a randomized policy experiment in the Philippines, we found that interventions to expand insurance coverage and improve provider quality both had an impact on out-of-pocket payments. The sample consists of 3121 child-patient patient observations across 30 hospitals either at baseline in 2003/04 or at the follow-up in 2007/08. Compared to controls, interventions that expanded insurance and provided performance-based provider payments to improve quality both resulted in a decline in out-of-pocket spending (21% decline, p-value = 0.061; and 24% decline, p-value = 0.017, respectively). With lower out-of-pocket payments for hospital care, monthly household spending on personal hygiene rose by 0.9 (p-value = 0.026) and 0.6 US$ (p-value = 0.098) under the expanded insurance and provider payment interventions, respectively, amounting to roughly a 40-60% increase relative to the controls. With the current surge for health insurance expansion in developing countries, our study suggests paying increased and possibly, equal attention to supply-side interventions will have similar impacts with operational simplicity and greater provider accountability.

Keywords: Health care quality; Health insurance; Out-of-pocket payments; Philippines; RCT; Universal health coverage.

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