4.3 Article

CATASTROPHIC MEDICAL PAYMENT AND FINANCIAL PROTECTION IN RURAL CHINA: EVIDENCE FROM THE NEW COOPERATIVE MEDICAL SCHEME IN SHANDONG PROVINCE

期刊

HEALTH ECONOMICS
卷 18, 期 1, 页码 103-119

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hec.1346

关键词

China; medical costs; community financing; catastrophic illness; rural health; health insurance; health protection

资金

  1. The Ford Foundation International Fellowship Program
  2. National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health of the Australian National University
  3. Australian Research Council Large Research Grant [A00105533]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Objective: To measure the impact of China's New Cooperative Medical Scheme (NCMS) on catastrophic medical payments of rural households in Linyi County, Shandong Province. Method: In 2005, from a stratified cluster sample of 3101 rural households, we identified 375 households that might be at risk of catastrophic payments by searching through NCMS claims and interviewing key informants. We interviewed these 375 households and confirmed that 231 had had catastrophic payments (>= 40% of file households' capacity to pay; CTP) during 2004. A validity test of our screening method found another eight cases among immediate neighbours of these 375 households; by extrapolation, we obtained an adjusted total of 289 catastrophic households in the sample of 3101. We measured the impact of the NCMS on hardship alleviation by counterfactual analysis, comparing catastrophic payments before and after NCMS reimbursements. Result: The effect was twofold. Before NCMS intervention 8.98% of Linyi population had had catastrophic out-of-pocket payments compared with 8.25% after reimbursements. Catastrophic severity for households remaining in catastrophe after reimbursement dropped by 18.7% to an average of 6.34 times the household's CTP. Conclusion: Out-of-pocket medical payments remain a burden for rural households. Financial protection from the NCMS, with ail average reimbursement of 17.8%, was modest and should be restructured to provide better benefits that are targeted to those in most need. Copyright (c) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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