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Photos from Hans Kemp. Health insurance for the poor in Vietnam An impact evaluation of Vietnam’s health insurance program. Adam Wagstaff Development Research Group & East Asia HD, The World Bank. Introduction. Policy and program issues:
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Photos from Hans Kemp Health insurance for the poor in Vietnam An impact evaluation of Vietnam’s health insurance program Adam Wagstaff Development Research Group & East Asia HD, The World Bank
Introduction • Policy and program issues: • Lack of health insurance in China and Vietnam following de-collectivization of agriculture • New policy of public finance of free health care for the poor by enrolling them in social insurance • Substantive issues: • Health insurance literature focuses on negative • Paper looks at risk-reduction associated with HI, and positive consequences from it • Methodological issues: • Paper uses propensity score matching (PSM) with pre- and post-intervention data to estimate impact of health insurance • Empirical findings & policy implications
Policy issues Policy/institutional issues • In China and Vietnam, cooperative health insurance collapsed after de-collectivization of agriculture • In both countries concern over affordability of health care, esp. among rural poor • People encouraged to enroll in Vietnam’s health insurance (VHI) program—compulsory for certain groups • Decision 139 mandates and supports provinces to enroll poor in VHI (or make alternative arrangements for them) • What will impact of enrollment among 139 beneficiaries be on key outcomes?
Policy issues Costly care, high spending
Policy issues Impoverishing too
Policy issues Impoverishing too Out-of-pocket payments for health care pushed 2.6m Vietnamese into poverty in 1998. Increased headcount by 23% and poverty gap by 25%
Policy issues VHI before decision 139 • Set up in 1993, reformed in 1999 • Compulsory scheme for formal sector workers, civil servants, etc. • Voluntary scheme—currently attracts mostly school kids & students • By 1998, 15% enrolled; 60% compulsorily • Coverage against inpatient costs, & fees incurred in outpatient care; less generous coverage for voluntary members
Policy issues How decision 139 will change coverage
Substantive issues Health insurance issues • Much of the health insurance literature emphasizes the negative: • Moral hazard • Adverse selection • Recent work emphasizes: • Risk-reduction benefits of insurance, and positive consequences of this • Lower precautionary savings • Better health outcomes • Difficulty of measuring true moral hazard
Methodological issues Evaluation with non-experimental data Difference = effect of treatment on treated Difference = bias
Methodological issues Propensity score matching as approach to reducing bias
Empirical results Data & variables • Data from Vietnam Living Standards Survey • High proportion of HHs interviewed in 1993 were re-interviewed in 1998 • Outcomes variables • Contact probability • Volume of services used (1998 data only, so can do only single difference PSM) • Out-of-pocket payments • Non-medical HH spending • Child health, measured through anthropometrics (underweight, etc.)
Empirical results Probit model for participation • VHI enrollment depends on • Whether in school (+) • Employed: • Communist party, government, army, social organization, state-owned company (+) • Private company (-) • Income (+) • Education (+) • Urban (+) • Commune fixed effects
Empirical results Descriptives of probability, before & after matching
Empirical results Histograms of probabilities, before and after matching Uninsured Insured
Empirical results PSM results #1 (DD & SD) DD=double difference; SD=single difference
Empirical results PSM results #2 (SD)
PSM useful for program evaluation—use panel data and diffs-in-diffs estimator if possible VHI increases contact probability, volume of use No impact on out-of-pocket payments Effect on non-medical consumption—reflects risk reduction? For hospital care, smallest impact of VHI among the poor Extrapolation to “139” difficult—poorest quintile estimates most relevant; but NB no copayments Conclusions