期刊论文详细信息
BMC Health Services Research
Determinants of community health fund membership in Tanzania: a mixed methods analysis
Josephine Borghi2  Gemini Mtei1  Suzan Makawia1  August Kuwawenaruwa1  Jane Macha1 
[1] Ifakara Health Institute, Plot 463, Kiko Ave., Mikocheni, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania;London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, UK
关键词: Quality of health services;    Sustainability;    Adverse selection;    Enrolment;    Community health fund;    Community based health insurance;   
Others  :  1091308
DOI  :  10.1186/s12913-014-0538-9
 received in 2014-03-18, accepted in 2014-10-20,  发布年份 2014
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

In many developing countries, initiatives are underway to strengthen voluntary community based health insurance as a means of expanding access to affordable care among the informal sector. However, increasing coverage with voluntary health insurance in low income settings can prove challenging. There are limited studies on determinants of enrolling in these schemes using mixed methods. This study aims to shed light on the characteristics of those joining a community health fund, a type of community based health insurance, in Tanzania and the reasons for their membership and subsequent drop out using mixed methods.

Methods

A cross sectional survey of households in four rural districts was conducted in 2008, covering a total of 1,225 (524 members of CHF and 701 non-insured) households and 7,959 individuals. In addition, 12 focus group discussions were carried out with CHF members, non-scheme members and members of health facility governing committees in two rural districts. Logistic regression was used to assess the determinants of CHF membership while thematic analysis was done to analyse qualitative data.

Results

The quantitative analysis revealed that the three middle income quintiles were more likely to enrol in the CHF than the poorest and the richest. CHF member households were more likely to be large, and headed by a male than uninsured households from the same areas. The qualitative data supported the finding that the poor rather than the poorest were more likely to join as were large families and of greater risk of illness, with disabilities or persons with chronic diseases. Households with elderly members or children under-five years were also more likely to enrol. Poor understanding of risk pooling deterred people from joining the scheme and was the main reason for not renewing membership. On the supply side, poor quality of public care services, the limited benefit package and a lack of provider choice were the main factors for low enrolment.

Conclusions

Determinants of CHF membership are diverse and improving the quality of health services and expanding the benefit package should be prioritised to expand voluntary health insurance coverage.

【 授权许可】

   
2014 Macha et al.; licensee BioMed Cental Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20150128171000935.pdf 262KB PDF download
【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Preker AS, Carrin G, Dror D, Jakab M, Hsiao W, Arhin-Tenkorang D: Effectiveness of community health financing in meeting the cost of illness. Bull World Health Organ 2002, 80(2):143-150.
  • [2]Jütting JP: Do community-based health insurance schemes improve poor people’s access to health care? Evidence from rural Senegal. World Dev 2004, 32(2):273-288.
  • [3]Ekman B: Community-based health insurance in low-income countries: a systematic review of the evidence. Health Policy Plan 2004, 19(5):249-270.
  • [4]Kamuzora P, Gilson L: Factors influencing implementation of the Community Health Fund in Tanzania. Health Policy Plan 2007, 22(2):95-102.
  • [5]De Allegri M, Kouyaté B, Becher H, Gbangou A, Pokhrel S, Sanon M, Sauerborn R: Understanding enrolment in community health insurance in sub-Saharan Africa: a population-based case–control study in rural Burkina Faso. Bull World Health Organ 2006, 84(11):852-858.
  • [6]Ron A: NGOs in community health insurance schemes: examples from Guatemala and the Philippines. Soc Sci Med 1999, 48:939-950.
  • [7]Bennett S, Creese A, Monasch R: Health Insurance Schemes for People Outside Formal Sector Employment. WHO/ARA/CC/98.1. Division of Analysis, Research and Assessment, WHO, Geneva; 1998.
  • [8]Ranson KM, Sinha T, Chatterjee M, Acharya A, Bhavsar A, Morris SS, Mills AJ: Making health insurance work for the poor: learning from the Self-Employed Women's Assocoation's (SEWA) community-based health insurance scheme in India. Soc Sci Med 2006, 62:707-720.
  • [9]Acharya A, Vellakkal S, Masset E, Satija A, Burke M, Ebrahim S: Systematic Review Impact of National Health Insurance for the Poor and the Informal Sector in Low- and Middle-Income Countries by. 2012.
  • [10]Spaan E, Mathijssen J, Tromp N, McBain F, Have AT, Baltussen R: The impact of health insurance in Africa and Asia: a systematic review. Bull World Health Organ 2012, 90:685-692.
  • [11]Twahirwa A: Sharing the burden of sickness: mutual health insurance in Rwanda. Bull World Health Organ 2008, 86(11):823-824.
  • [12]Lu C, Chin B, Lewandowski JL, Basinga P, Hirschhorn LR, Hill K, Murray M, Binagwaho A: Towards universal health coverage: an evaluation of Rwanda Mutuelles in its first eight years.PLoS One 2012, 7(6).
  • [13]Mills A, Ataguba JE, Akazili J, Borghi J, Garshong B, Makawia S, Mtei G, Harris B, Macha J, Meheus F, McIntyre D: Equity in financing and use of health care in Ghana, South Africa, and Tanzania: implications for paths to universal coverage. Lancet 2012, 380(9837):126-133.
  • [14]Amporfu E: Equity of the premium of the Ghanaian national health insurance scheme and the implications for achieving universal coverage.Int J Equity Health 2013, 12(4).
  • [15]Carrin G, Waelkens M-P, Criel B: Community-based health insurance in developing countries: a study of its contribution to the performance of health financing systems. Trop Med Int Health 2005, 10(8):799-811.
  • [16]Okello F, Feeley F: Socioeconomic Characteristics of Enrollees in Community Health Insurance Schemes in Africa. USAID/Commercial Market Strategies Project, Washington DC; 2004.
  • [17]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? Soc Sci Med 2011, 72:157-165.
  • [18]Criel B, Waelkens M-P: Declining subscription to maliando mutual health organization in Guinea-Conakry (West Africa): what is going wrong? Soc Sci Med 2003, 57:1205-1219.
  • [19]Bonu S: Using willingness to pay to investigate regressiveness of user fees in health facilities in Tanzania. Health Policy Plan 2003, 18(4):370-382.
  • [20]Ozawa S, Walker DG: Trust in the context of community-based health insurance schemes in Cambodia: villagers’ trust in health insurers. Adv Health Econ Health Serv Res 2009, 21:107-132.
  • [21]Alkenbrack S, Jacobs B, Lindelow M: Achieving universal health coverage through voluntary insurance: what can we learn from the experience of Lao PDR? BMC Health Serv Res 2013, 13(1):521. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [22]De Allegri M, Sanon M, Sauerborn R: “To enrol or not to enrol?”: A qualitative investigation of demand for health insurance in rural West Africa. Soc Sci Med 2006, 62(6):1520-1527.
  • [23]Macha J, Harris B, Garshong B, Ataguba JE, Akazili J, Kuwawenaruwa A, Borghi J: Factors influencing the burden of health care financing and the distribution of health care benefits in Ghana, Tanzania and South Africa. Health Policy Plan 2012, 27(suppl 1):i46-i54.
  • [24]Stoermer M, Hanlon P, Tawa M, Macha J, Mosha D: Community Health Funds (CHFs) in Tanzania: Innovations Study. Swiss TPH, Dar es Salaam; 2012.
  • [25]Borghi J, Maluka S, Kuwawenaruwa A, Makawia S, Tantau J, Mtei G, Ally M, Macha J: Promoting universal financial protection: a case study of new management of community health insurance in Tanzania.Health Res Policy Syst 2013, 11(21).
  • [26]McIntyre D: Beyond fragmentation and towards universal coverage: insights from Ghana, South Africa and the United Republic of Tanzania. Bull World Health Organ 2008, 86(11):871-876.
  • [27]Mtei G, Mulligan J: Community Health Funds in Tanzania: A literature review. Ifakara Health Research and Development Centre, Dar es Salaam; 2007a.
  • [28]Maluka SO: Why are pro-poor exemption policies in Tanzania better implemented in some districts than in others? Int J Equity Health 2013, 12:80. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [29]The Community Health Fund Act, 2001. Acts Supplement to the Gazette of the United Republic of Tanzania, No. 14 Vol 82. Ministry of Health, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; 2001.
  • [30]Humba E: Pioneering social health insurance in Tanzania: The case of the National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF). In Improving Access through Effective Health Financing. UBS Training and conference centre, Basel, Switzerland, Swiss TPH; 2011.
  • [31]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(2–3):174-179.
  • [32]Dong H, Kouyate B, Cairns J, Mugisha F, Sauerborn R: Willingness-to-pay for community-based insurance in Burkina Faso. Health Econ 2003, 12(10):849-862.
  • [33]Witter S: Service- and population-based exemptions: are these the way forward for equity and efficiency in health financing in low-income countries? Adv Health Econ Health Serv Res 2009, 21:251-288.
  • [34]Zhang L, Wang H: Dynamic process of adverse selection: evidence from a subsized community- based health insurance in reual China. Soc Sci Med 2008, 67:1173-1182.
  • [35]Thornton RL, Hatt LE, Field EM, Islam M, Diaz FS, Gonzalez MA: Social security health insurance for the informal sector in Nicaragua: a randomized evaluation. Health Econ 2010, 19(Suppl):181-206.
  • [36]Gnawali DP, Pokhrel S, Sie A, Sanon M, De Allegri M, Souares A, Dong H, Sauerborn R: The effect of community-based health insurance on the utilization of modern health care services: evidence from Burkina Faso. Health Policy 2009, 90(2–3):214-222.
  • [37]Kyomugisha EL, Buregyeya E, Ekirapa E, Mugisha JF, Bazeyo W: Strategies for sustainability and equity of prepayment health schemes in Uganda. Afr Health Sci 2009, 9(2):s59-s65.
  • [38]Kiwara A: Group premiums in micro health insurance: experiences from Tanzania. East Afr J Public Health 2007, 4(1):28-32.
  • [39]Parmar D, Souares A, de Allegri M, Savadogo G, Sauerborn R: Adverse selection in a community-based health insurance scheme in rural Africa- Implications for introducing targeted subsidies. BMC Health Serv Res 2012, 12:181. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [40]Cofie P, De Allegri M, Kouyate B, Sauerborn R: Effects of information, education, and communication campaign on a community-based health insurance scheme in Burkina Faso. Glob Health Action 2013, 6:20791.
  • [41]Basaza RK, Criel B, Van der Stuyft P: Community health insurance amidst abolition of user fees in Uganda: the view from policy makers and health service managers. BMC Health Serv Res 2010, 10:33. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [42]Borghi J, Mayumana I, Mashasi I, Binyaruka P, Patouillard E, Njau I, Maestad O, Abdulla S, Mamdani M: Protocol for the evaluation of a pay for performance programme in Pwani region in Tanzania: a controlled before and after study. Implement Sci 2013, 8:80. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [43]Borghi J, Makawia S, Kuwawenaruwa A: The administrative costs of community-based health insurance: a case study of the community health fund in Tanzania.Health Policy Plan 2013, 1–9. doi:10.1093/heapol/czt093.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:13次 浏览次数:9次