期刊论文详细信息
BMC International Health and Human Rights
Ghana’s National Health Insurance Scheme: a national level investigation of members’ perceptions of service provision
Isaac Luginaah1  Eric Y Tenkorang2  Jenna Dixon1 
[1] Department of Geography, The University of Western Ontario, 1151 Richmond Street, London, ON N6A 5C2, Canada;Department of Sociology, Memorial University, St. John’s, NF A1C 5S7, Canada
关键词: Service;    Perceptions;    National health insurance scheme;    Health insurance;    Ghana;    Health care;   
Others  :  855112
DOI  :  10.1186/1472-698X-13-35
 received in 2013-02-19, accepted in 2013-08-21,  发布年份 2013
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

Ghana’s National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), established into law in 2003 and implemented in 2005 as a ‘pro-poor’ method of health financing, has made great progress in enrolling members of the general population. While many studies have focused on predictors of enrolment this study offers a novel analysis of NHIS members’ perceptions of service provision at the national level.

Methods

Using data from the 2008 Ghana Demographic Health Survey we analyzed the perceptions of service provision as indicated by members enrolled in the NHIS at the time of the survey (n = 3468; m = 1422; f = 2046). Ordinal Logistic Regression was applied to examine the relationship between perceptions of service provision and theoretically relevant socioeconomic and demographic variables.

Results

Results demonstrate that wealth, gender and ethnicity all play a role in influencing members’ perceptions of NHIS service provision, distinctive from its influence on enrolment. Notably, although wealth predicted enrolment in other studies, our study found that compared to the poorest men and uneducated women, wealthy men and educated women were less likely to perceive their service provision as better/same (more likely to report it was worse). Wealth was not an important factor for women, suggesting that household gender dynamics supersede household wealth status in influencing perceptions. As well, when compared to Akan women, women from all other ethnic groups were about half as likely to perceive the service provision to be better/same.

Conclusions

Findings of this study suggest there is an important difference between originally enrolling in the NHIS because one believes it is potentially beneficial, and using the NHIS and perceiving it to be of benefit. We conclude that understanding the nature of this relationship is essential for Ghana’s NHIS to ensure its longevity and meet its pro-poor mandate. As national health insurance systems are a relatively new phenomenon in sub-Saharan Africa little is known about their long term viability; understanding user perceptions of service provision is an important piece of that puzzle.

【 授权许可】

   
2013 Dixon et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20140722030059788.pdf 218KB PDF download
【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Wagner AK, Graves AJ, Reiss SK, LeCates R, Zhang F, Ross-Degnan D: Access to care and medicines, burden of health care expenditures, and risk protection: Results from the World Health Survey. Health Policy 2011, 100(2):151-158.
  • [2]Health Systems 20/20: Mutual health insurance, scaling-up and the expansion of health insurance in Africa. Bethesda, MD: USAID; 2010. http://www.healthsystems2020.org/content/resource/detail/2523/ webcite
  • [3]World Bank: Ghana & Rwanda set the example on scaling up health insurance in Africa. 2009. http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/TOPICS/EXTHEALTHNUTRITIONANDPOPULATION/EXTHSD/0,,contentMDK:22383215~menuPK:376799~pagePK:64020865~piPK:149114~theSitePK:376793,00.html webcite
  • [4]Agyepong IA, Adjei S: Public social policy development and implementation: a case study of the Ghana National Health Insurance scheme. Health Policy and Planning 2008, 23:150-160.
  • [5]Anyinam C: The social cost of the IMF’s adjustment programs for poverty: the case of health care in Ghana. International Journal of Health Service 1989, 19:531-547.
  • [6]Asenso-Okyere WK, Osei-Akoto I, Anum A, Adukonu A: The impact of cost recovery on health care seeking behavior: a qualitative study of three districts in Ghana. Monograph: Health Social Sciences Research Unit, Legon, Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research, University of Ghana, Accra; 1995.
  • [7]Hutchful E: Ghana’s Adjustment experience: the paradox of reform. UK: UNRISD; 2002.
  • [8]Konadu-Agyemang K: The best of times and the worst of times: structural adjustment programs and uneven development in Africa: the case of Ghana. Professional Geographer 2000, 52:469-483.
  • [9]Waddington CJ, Enyimayew KA: A price to pay: the impact of user charges in Ashanti–Akim District, Ghana. International Journal of Health Planning and Management 1989, 4:14-47.
  • [10]Witter S, Garshong B: Something old or something new? Social health insurance in Ghana. BMC International Health and Human Rights 2009., 9(20) http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-698X/9/20 webcite BioMed Central Full Text
  • [11]NHIA: National Health Insurance authority annual report 2010. 2011. [http://www.nhis.gov.gh/_Uploads/dbsAttachedFiles/8%281%29.pdf webcite]
  • [12]Twumasi P: National health insurance and second class citizenship status. Modern Ghana25 April 2013 http://www.modernghana.com/news/460328/1/national-health-insurance-and-second-class-citizen.html webcite
  • [13]Appiah IE: Gov’t asks NHIS card holders to access private clinics but GMA says that won’t work. Ghana My Joy Online10 April 2013 http://edition.myjoyonline.com/pages/news/201304/104221.php webcite
  • [14]National Planning DevelopmentCommission: Citizens’ assessment survey. Accra: NDPC; 2008:2009.
  • [15]NHIA: National health insurance authority annual report 2009. 2010. http://www.nhis.gov.gh/_Uploads/dbsAttachedFiles/1%281%29.pdf webcite
  • [16]Dixon J, Tenkorang EY, Luginaah I: Ghana’s National Health Insurance Scheme: helping the poor or leaving them behind? Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 2011, 29:1102-1115.
  • [17]Apoya P, Marriott A: Achieving a shared goal: free universal health care in Ghana. London: Oxfam International; 2011.
  • [18]NHIA: National health insurance authority annual report 2011. 2012. http://www.nhis.gov.gh/_Uploads/dbsAttachedFiles/23%281%29.pdf webcite
  • [19]Asante F, Aikins M: Does the NHIS cover the poor?. Accra: DANIDA; 2007.
  • [20]Jehu-Appiah C, Aryeetey G, Spaan E, de Hoop T, Agyepong I, Baltussen R: Equity aspects of the National Health Insurance Scheme in Ghana: who is enrolling, who is not and why? Social Science & Medicine 2011, 72:157-165.
  • [21]Sarpong N, Loag W, Fobil J, Meyer CG, Adu-Sarkodie Y, May J, Schwarz NG: National health insurance coverage and socio- economic status in a rural district of Ghana. Tropical Medicine and International Health 2010, 15:191-197.
  • [22]Bruce E, Narh-Bana S, Agyepong I: Community satisfaction, equity in coverage and implications for sustainability of the Dangme West Health Insurance Scheme Project No. 2001/GD/08 technical report series No. 9. Ghanaian Dutch Collaboration for Health Research and Development: Accra; 2008.
  • [23]Jehu-Appiah C, Aryeetey G, Agyepong I, Spaan E, Baltussen R: Household perceptions and their implications for enrolment in the National Health Insurance Scheme in Ghana. Health Policy and Planning 2012, 27:222-233.
  • [24]Atinga RA, Abekah-Nkrumah G, Domfeh KA: Managing healthcare quality in Ghana: a necessity of patient satisfaction. International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance 2011, 24:548-563.
  • [25]Akazili J, Garshong B, Aikins M, Gyapong J, McIntyre D: Progressivity of health care financing and incidence of service benefits in Ghana. Health Policy and Planning 2012, 27:13-22.
  • [26]Dong H, Kouyate B, Cairns J, Sauerborn R: Inequality in willingness-to-pay for community - based health insurance. Health Policy 2005, 72:149-156.
  • [27]Akosah-Sarpong K: Atta-mills and presidential health. GhanaWeb 2008. 18 February http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/crime/artikel.php?ID=139211 webcite
  • [28]Danso KA: Ghana’s health care arithmetic – where is the money going to? GhanaWeb 2009. http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/artikel.php?ID=166732 webcite
  • [29]Gobah T: I’m not dead - prez mills. Daily Graphic19 December 2011 http://www.modernghana.com/newsthread1/367704/1 webcite
  • [30]Tolhurst R, Amekudzi YP, Nyonator FK, Squire SB, Theobald S: “He will ask why the child gets sick so often”: The gendered dynamics of intra-household bargaining over healthcare for children with fever in the Volta Region of Ghana. Social Science & Medicine 2008, 66:1106-1117.
  • [31]Tolhurst R, Nyonator FK: Looking within the household: gender roles and responses to malaria in Ghana. Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 2006, 100:321-326.
  • [32]Arhinful D: The solidarity of self-interest: social and cultural feasibility of rural health insurance in Ghana. Leiden: African Studies Centre; 2003.
  • [33]Dong H, De Allegri M, Gnawali D, Souares A, Sauerborn R: Drop-out analysis of community- based health insurance membership at Nouna, Burkina Faso. Health Policy 2009, 92:174-179.
  • [34]Ghana Health Service: 2009 GHS annual report. 2009. http://www.ghanahealthservice.org/includes/upload/publications/FINAL_DRAFT_2009_GHS_Annual_Report%20final%20final.pdf webcite
  • [35]Carrin G, Waelkens M, Criel B: Community-based health insurance in developing countries: a study of its contributions to the performance of health financing systems. Tropical Medicine & International Health 2005, 10:799-811.
  • [36]Hsiao WC, Shaw RP: Social health insurance for developing nations. Washington: World Bank; 2007.
  • [37]Joy Online: NHIS is not near collapse – Quarmyne. GhanaWeb 2013. 14 March http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=267726 webcite
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:5次 浏览次数:11次