523 research outputs found
Health insurance for the poor in India
Community based health insurance (CBHI) is more suited than alternate arrangements to providing health insurance to the low-income people living in developing countries. The universal health insurance scheme, launched recently by the Prime Minister of India, is only one of the forms that CBHI can take. While analysing the proposed scheme, we examine alternate forms of CBHI schemes prevalent in the country.The development of private health insurance market in the country will not leave the poor unaffected. Insurance sector reform can affect the poor through its effect on the provision of health services (i.e., cost, quality and access) used by the low-income people as well as through its access to financing of health care. In this paper we also explore how insurance sector reforms alter health insurance prospects facing the poor in India, and what changes on the health front affecting the poor have happened or are likely to happen as a result of insurance sector reforms. We conclude that in diverse settings of India all forms of CBHI have a role to play and therefore need to be encouraged by the government through appropriate interventions. Formal insurance providers can also be reigned to serve low-in comepopulation. At the same time, developments in formal health insurance market need to be guided so as to minimise cost escalation of health care provisionHealth Insurance; Low-income people; poverty; risk and insurance; insurance schemes
Are the poor too poor to demand health insurance?
Community based micro insurance has aroused much interest and hope in meeting health care challenges facing the poor. In this paper we explore how institutional rigidities such as credit constraint impinge on demand for health insurance and how insurance could potentially prevent poor households from fallinginto poverty trap. In this setting, we argue that the appropriate public intervention in generating demand for insurance is not to subsidise premium but to remove these rigidities (easing credit constraint in the present context). Thus from insurance perspective as well, our analysis highlights the importance of having appropriate savings and borrowing instruments for the poor.Micro-insurance, Micro-credit, Credit Constraint, Demand for Insurance
Dynamic atmospheres and winds of cool luminous giants, I. AlO and silicate dust in the close vicinity of M-type AGB stars
High spatial resolution techniques have given valuable insights into the mass
loss mechanism of AGB stars, which presumably involves a combination of
atmospheric levitation by pulsation-induced shock waves and radiation pressure
on dust. Observations indicate that AlO condenses at distances of about
2 stellar radii or less, prior to the formation of silicates. AlO
grains are therefore prime candidates for producing the scattered light
observed in the close vicinity of several M-type AGB stars, and they may be
seed particles for the condensation of silicates at lower temperatures. We have
constructed a new generation of Dynamic Atmosphere & Radiation-driven Wind
models based on Implicit Numerics (DARWIN), including a time-dependent
treatment of grain growth & evaporation for both AlO and Fe-free
silicates (MgSiO). The equations describing these dust species are
solved in the framework of a frequency-dependent radiation-hydrodynamical model
for the atmosphere & wind structure, taking pulsation-induced shock waves and
periodic luminosity variations into account. Condensation of AlO at the
close distances and in the high concentrations implied by observations requires
high transparency of the grains in the visual and near-IR region to avoid
destruction by radiative heating. For solar abundances, radiation pressure due
to AlO is too low to drive a wind. Nevertheless, this dust species may
have indirect effects on mass loss. The formation of composite grains with an
AlO core and a silicate mantle can give grain growth a head start,
increasing both mass loss rates and wind velocities. Furthermore, our
experimental core-mantle grain models lead to variations of visual and near-IR
colors during a pulsation cycle which are in excellent agreement with
observations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (18 pages, 9
figures
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