40 research outputs found
The impact of Ethiopia’s pilot community based health insurance scheme on healthcare utilization and cost of care
In recent years there has been a proliferation of Community Based Health Insurance (CBHI) schemes designed to enhance access to modern health care services and provide financial protection to workers in the informal and rural sectors. In June 2011, the Government of Ethiopia introduced a pilot CBHI scheme in rural parts of the country. This paper assesses the impact of the scheme on utilization of modern health care and the cost of accessing health care. It adds to the relatively small body of work that provides a rigorous evaluation of CBHI schemes. We find that enrolment leads to a 30 to 41 percent increase in utilization of outpatient care at public facilities, a 45 to 64 percent increase in the frequency of visits to public facilities and at least a 56 percent decline in the cost per visit to public facilities. The effects of the scheme on out-of-pocket spending are not as clear. The impact on utilization and costs combined with a high uptake rate of almost 50 percent within two years of scheme establishment, suggests that this scheme has the potential to meet the goal of universal access to health care
Self-reported health care seeking behavior in rural Ethiopia: Evidence from clinical vignettes
Between 2000 and 2011, Ethiopia rapidly expanded its health-care infrastructure recording an 18-fold increase in the number of health posts and a 7-fold increase in the number of health centers. However, annual per capita outpatient utilization has increased only marginally. The extent to which individuals forego necessary health care, especially why and who foregoes care are issues that have received little attention in the context of low-income countries. This paper uses five clinical vignettes covering a range of context-specific child and adult-related diseases to explore the health-seeking behavior of rural Ethiopian households. We find almost universal preference for modern care. There is a systematic relationship between socioeconomic status and choice of providers mainly for adult-related conditions with households in higher consumption quintiles more likely to seek care in health centers, private/NGO clinics as opposed to health posts. Similarly, delays in care-seeking behavior are apparent mainly for adult-related conditions. The differences in care seeking behavior between adult and child related conditions may be attributed to the recent spread of health posts which have focused on raising awareness of maternal and child health. Overall, the analysis suggests that the lack of health-care utilization is not driven by the inability to recognize health problems or due to a low perceived need for modern care but due to other factors
Healthcare-seeking behaviour in rural Ethiopia: Evidence from clinical vignettes
__Abstract__
Objectives: To investigate the determinants of
healthcare-seeking behaviour using five contextrelevant
clinical vignettes. The analysis deals with three
issues: whether and where to seek modern care and
when to seek care.
Setting: This study is set in 96 villages located in four
main regions of Ethiopia. The participants of this study
are 1632 rural households comprising 9455 individuals.
Primary and secondary outcome measures:
Probability of seeking modern care for symptoms
related to acute respiratory infections/pneumonia,
diarrhoea, malaria, tetanus and tuberculosis.
Conditional on choosing modern healthcare, where to
seek care (health post, health centre, clinic and
hospital). Conditional on choosing modern healthcare,
when to seek care (seek care immediately, the next day,
after 2 days, between 3 days to 1 week, a week
or more).
Results: We find almost universal preference for
modern care. Foregone care ranges from 0.6% for
diarrhoea to 2.5% for tetanus. There is a systematic
relationship between socioeconomic status and choice
of providers mainly for adult-related conditions with
households in higher consumption quintiles more likely
to seek care in health centres, private/Non-Government
Organization (NGO) clinics as opposed to health posts.
Delays in care-seeking behaviour are apparent mainly
for adult-related conditions and among poorer
households.
Conclusions: The analysis suggests that the lack of
healthcare utilisation is not driven by the inability to
recognise health problems or due to a low perceived
need for modern care
Coping with shocks in rural Ethiopia
Based on household survey data and event history interviews undertaken in a highly shock prone country, this paper investigates which shocks trigger which coping responses and why? We find clear differences in terms of coping strategies across shock types. The two relatively covariate shocks, that is, economic and natural shocks are more likely to trigger reductions in savings and in food consumption while the sale of assets and borrowing is less common. Coping with relatively idiosyncratic health shocks is met by reductions in savings, asset sales and especially a far greater reliance on borrowing as compared to other shocks. Reductions in food consumption, a prominent response in the case of natural and economic shocks is notably absent in the case of health shocks. Across all shock types, households do not rely on gifts from family and friends or on enhancing their labour supply as coping approaches. The relative insensitivity of food consumption to health shocks based on the shocks-coping analysis presented here is consistent with existing work which examines consumption insurance. However, our analysis leads to a different interpretation. We argue that this insensitivity should not be viewed as insurability of food consumption against health shocks but rather as an indication that a reduction in food consumption is not a viable coping response to a health shock as it does not provide cash to meet health care needs
Shocks and coping strategies in rural Ethiopia: a policy brief
ASC – Publicaties niet-programma gebonde
Coping with shocks in rural Ethiopia
Based on household survey data and event history interviews undertaken in a highly shock prone country, this paper investigates which shocks trigger which coping responses and why? We find clear differences in terms of coping strategies across shock types. The two relatively covariate shocks, that is, economic and natural shocks are more likely to trigger reductions in savings and in food consumption while the sale of assets and borrowing is less common. Coping with relatively idiosyncratic health shocks is met by reductions in savings, asset sales and especially a far greater reliance on borrowing as compared to other shocks. Reductions in food consumption, a prominent response in the case of natural and economic shocks is notably absent in the case of health shocks. Across all shock types, households do not rely on gifts from family and friends or on enhancing their labour supply as coping approaches. The relative insensitivity of food consumption to health shocks based on the shocks-coping analysis presented here is consistent with existing work which examines consumption insurance. However, our analysis leads to a different interpretation. We argue that this insensitivity should not be viewed as insurability of food consumption against health shocks but rather as an indication that a reduction in food consumption is not a viable coping response to a health shock as it does not provide cash to meet health care needs.ASC – Publicaties niet-programma gebonde