| Literature DB >> 26762146 |
Xiaoting Liu1, Hung Wong2, Kai Liu3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Against the achievement of nearly universal coverage for social health insurance for the elderly in China, a problem of inequity among different insurance schemes on health outcomes is still a big challenge for the health care system. Whether various health insurance schemes have divergent effects on health outcome is still a puzzle. Empirical evidence will be investigated in this study.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26762146 PMCID: PMC4712604 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1261-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Sample characteristics
| 2006 | 2010 | |
|---|---|---|
| Characteristics |
|
|
| Age: mean (SDa) | 71.18 (7.00) | 72.25 (7.45) |
| Range (years) | 60–109 | 60–103 |
| Sex: n (%) | 19947 (100) | 19986 (100) |
| Men | 10462 (52.4) | 10338 (51.7) |
| Women | 9485 (47.6) | 9648 (48.3) |
| Education: n (%) | 19929 (100) | 19957 (100) |
| Illiteracy | 7146 (35.9) | 5779 (29.0) |
| Primary school | 7255 (36.4) | 7772 (38.9) |
| Junior middle school | 2918 (14.6) | 3635 (18.2) |
| Senior middle school/Technical secondary school | 1664 (8.3) | 1780 (8.9) |
| University and above | 946 (4.7) | 991 (5.0) |
| Individual incomeb: mean (SD) | 483.35 (963.45) | 886.61 (1689.56) |
| Hukou: n (%) | 19914 (100) | 19973 (100) |
| Urban | 9920 (49.8) | 10054 (50.3) |
| Rural | 9994 (50.2) | 9919 (49.7) |
| Numbers of chronic disease: mean (SD) | 1.96 (2.00) | 2.85 (1.92) |
| Range | 1–16 | 1–25 |
| Social support: mean (SD) | 12.05 (7.13) | 19.80 (18.81) |
| Health insurance: n (%) | 18662 (100) | 19532 (100) |
| UEBMI | 6328 (33.9) | 7423 (38.0) |
| URBMIc | —— | 1853 (9.5) |
| NCMS | 4698 (25.2) | 9675 (49.5) |
| Uninsured | 7636 (40.9) | 581 (3.0) |
a SD standard deviation. bAs identified in the measurement, individual income includes income from work, social security, governmental allowances, financial income, and transferred income. cURBMI was initiated in 2007, that is why there is no data for 2006
The disparities in health care expenditure by Insurance Schemes
| Total health care expenditure (CNY) | Insurance expendituref (CNY) | Out-of-pocket cost (CNY) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | 2010 | 2006 | 2010 | 2006 | 2010 | |
| UEBMIa | 4217.77 | 8089.14 | 2627.8 (62.30 %)d | 5059.74 (62.55 %) | 1416.77 (33.59 %) | 2638.17 (32.61 %) |
| URBMIb | —— | 4013.44* | —— | 1255.14* (31.27 %) | —— | 2458.50* (61.26 %) |
| NCMS | 1005.71* | 1899.80* | 111.79* (11.12 %) | 526.26* (27.70 %) | 855.36* (85.05 %) | 1255.95* (66.11 %) |
| Uninsured | 1099.14* | 3362.22* | 0* | 0* | 992.05* (90.26 %)e | 2660.23* (79.12 %) |
| Totalc | 2100.68*** | 4460.44*** | 912.05*** (43.42 %) | 2295.79*** (51.47 %) | 1089.3*** (51.85 %) | 1927.95*** (43.22 %) |
| Difference | ||||||
| UEBMI | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| URBMI | —— | 4075.70 | —— | 3804.6 | —— | 179.67 |
| NCMS | 3212.06 | 6189.34 | 2516.01 | 4533.48 | 561.41 | 1382.22 |
| Uninsured | 3118.63 | 3628.70 | 2627.80 | 5059.74 | 424.72 | −22.06 |
| Relative ratio | ||||||
| UEBMI | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| URBMI | —— | 2.02 | —— | 4.03 | —— | 1.07 |
| NCMS | 4.19 | 4.26 | 23.51 | 9.61 | 1.66 | 2.10 |
| Uninsured | 3.84 | 2.41 | —— | —— | 1.43 | 0.99 |
aIn the Post Hot Tests, this table only presented the significant level of difference in each two groups’ means if taking UEBMI as a reference; * the mean difference is significant at the 0.05 level
bAs URBMI was launched in 2007, there is no data for this insurance plan in 2006
c***p < 0.001, at least one group had a significantly different mean of total health expenditures, insurance expenditures and out-of-pocket expenses
dThe percentage in brackets demonstrated the proportion of insurance expenditures/ out-of-pocket cost accounted for total healthcare expenditures in each insurance scheme
eThe reason why out-of-pocket did not account for 100 % of total healthcare expenditures for uninsured group was that partially covered by Medical Assistance System
fThe insurance expenditures of UEBMI included both outpatient and inpatient costs in 2006 and 2010; which of URBMI and NCMS contained only inpatient reimbursements in 2006 and both inpatient and outpatient benefits in 2010 as the policy changed in 2009
Comparison of group means of health outcome among different types of health insurance schemes
| Self-reported health statusa | Physical functionsa | Psychological well-beinga | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | 2010 | 2006 | 2010 | 2006 | 2010 | |
| UEBMIb | 3.1 | 3.1 | 39.42 | 38.58 | 26.21 | 29.88 |
| URBMI | —— | 2.89* | —— | 36.61* | —— | 24.92* |
| NCMS | 2.96* | 2.89* | 37.88* | 37.13* | 25.39 | 26.22* |
| Uninsured | 2.88* | 2.91* | 37.12* | 36.58* | 21.82* | 24.65* |
| Totalc | 2.98*** | 2.97*** | 38.09*** | 37.62*** | 25.17 | 27.47*** |
| Relative ratio | ||||||
| UEBMI | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference | Reference |
| URBMI | —— | 1.07 | —— | 1.05 | —— | 1.20 |
| NCMS | 1.05 | 1.07 | 1.04 | 1.04 | 1.03 | 1.14 |
| Uninsured | 1.08 | 1.07 | 1.06 | 1.05 | 1.20 | 1.21 |
aSelf-reported health status is measured by a five-point Likert-Scale, while the range of the physical functions scale and the psychological well-being scale are 0–48 and 0–27 respectively. Higher value means better health status in all of above three dimensions of health outcome
bIn the Post Hot Tests, this table only presented the significant level of difference in each two groups’ means if taking UEBMI as a reference; * the mean difference is significant at the 0.05 level
c***p < 0.001, at least one group was different in its means of health outcome with that in other groups
Regression results for the self-reported health status of the elderly in 2010
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | |
| Age | −0.140 (0.001)*** | −0.141 (0.001)*** | −0.141 (0.001)*** | −0.141 (0.001)*** |
| Sex (male = 1) | 0.016 (0.014) | 0.016 (0.014) | 0.016 (0.014) | 0.016 (0.014) |
| Education | 0.085 (0.008)*** | 0.081 (0.008)*** | 0.081 (0.008)*** | 0.081 (0.008)*** |
| Individual income | 0.047 (0.000)*** | 0.044 (0.000)*** | 0.045 (0.000)*** | 0.044 (0.000)*** |
| Numbers of chronic disease | −0.236 (0.004)*** | −0.236 (0.004)*** | −0.236 (0.004)*** | −0.236 (0.004)*** |
| Social support | 0.067 (0.000)*** | 0.067 (0.000)*** | 0.066 (0.000)*** | 0.066 (0.000)*** |
| UEBMI | Reference | 0.058 (0.024)*** | 0.111 (0.018)*** | 0.083 (0.036)*** |
| URBMI | −0.026 (0.024)** | Reference | 0.036 (0.023)*** | 0.020 (0.037) |
| NCMS | −0.106 (0.018)*** | −0.054 (0.023)*** | Reference | −0.029 (0.035) |
| Uninsured | −0.019 (0.042)* | −0.003 (0.044) | 0.013 (0.041) | Reference |
| Adjust R Square | 0.121 | 0.122 | 0.122 | 0.122 |
| Observations | 13709 | 13709 | 13709 | 13709 |
UEBMI is used as a reference in Model 1, URBMI as a reference in Model 2, NCMS as a reference in Model 3, and the uninsured group as a reference in Model 4
SE Standard error
***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05
Regression results for physical functions of the elderly in 2010
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | |
| Age | −0.404 (0.007)*** | −0.404 (0.007)*** | −0.404 (0.007)*** | −0.404 (0.007)*** |
| Sex (male = 1) | 0.032 (0.100)*** | 0.031 (0.100)*** | 0.031 (0.100)*** | 0.031 (0.100)*** |
| Education | 0.087 (0.055)*** | 0.084 (0.055)*** | 0.084 (0.055)*** | 0.084 (0.055)*** |
| Individual income | 0.023 (0.000)* | 0.020 (0.000)* | 0.020 (0.000)* | 0.020 (0.000)* |
| Numbers of chronic disease | −0.159 (0.025)*** | −0.159 (0.025)*** | −0.159 (0.025)*** | −0.159 (0.025)*** |
| Social support | 0.047 (0.002)*** | 0.046 (0.002)*** | 0.046 (0.002)*** | 0.046 (0.002)*** |
| UEBMI | Reference | 0.076 (0.175)*** | 0.093 (0.133)*** | 0.092 (0.260)*** |
| URBMI | −0.041 (0.173)*** | Reference | 0.011 (0.164) | 0.010 (0.269) |
| NCMS | −0.088 (0.132)*** | −0.017 (0.164) | Reference | −0.001 (0.252) |
| Uninsured | −0.028 (0.303)*** | −0.006 (0.316) | −0.001 (0.296) | Reference |
| Adjust R Square | 0.247 | 0.247 | 0.247 | 0.247 |
| Observations | 13529 | 13529 | 13529 | 13529 |
UEBMI is a reference in Model 1, URBMI is a reference in Model 2, NCMS is a reference in Model 3, and the uninsured group is a reference in Model 4
SE standard error
***p < 0.001; *p < 0.05
Regression results for the psychological well-being of the elderly in 2010
| Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | Beta (SE) | |
| Age | 0.118 (0.012)*** | 0.117 (0.011)*** | 0.117 (0.011)*** | 0.116 (0.011)*** |
| Sex (male = 1) | −0.042 (0.171)*** | −0.042 (0.171)*** | −0.042 (0.171)*** | −0.042 (0.171)*** |
| Education | 0.098 (0.093)*** | 0.093 (0.094)*** | 0.092 (0.094)*** | 0.093 (0.094)*** |
| Individual income | 0.088 (0.000)*** | 0.084 (0.000)*** | 0.083 (0.000)*** | 0.084 (0.000)*** |
| Numbers of chronic disease | −0.112 (0.043)*** | −0.112 (0.043)*** | −0.112 (0.043)*** | −0.112 (0.043)*** |
| Social support | 0.073 (0.004)*** | 0.073 (0.004)*** | 0.073 (0.004)*** | 0.073 (0.004)*** |
| UEBMI | Reference | 0.184 (0.300)*** | 0.107 (0.226)*** | 0.195 (0.449)*** |
| URBMI | −0.104 (0.297)*** | Reference | −0.048 (0.282)*** | 0.004 (0.464) |
| NCMS | −0.094 (0.224)*** | 0.081 (0.283)*** | Reference | 0.092 (0.436)*** |
| Uninsured | −0.063 (0.522)*** | −0.010 (0.546) | −0.034 (0.511)*** | Reference |
| Adjust R Square | 0.08 | 0.081 | 0.081 | 0.081 |
| Observations | 13140 | 13140 | 13140 | 13140 |
UEBMI is a reference in Model 1, URBMI is a reference in Model 2, NCMS is a reference in Model 3, and the uninsured group is a reference in Model 4
SE standard error
***p < 0.001