| Literature DB >> 27557551 |
Francis-Xavier Andoh-Adjei1, Dennis Cornelissen2, Felix Ankomah Asante3, Ernst Spaan4, Koos van der Velden5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ghana introduced capitation payment for primary care in 2012 with the view to containing escalating claims expenditure. This shift in provider payment method raised issues about its potential impact on patient-provider trust relationship and insured-patients' trust in the Ghana National Health Insurance Scheme. This paper presents findings of a study that explored insured-patients' perception about, and attitude towards capitation payment in Ghana; and determined whether capitation payment affect insured-patients' trust in their preferred primary care provider and the National Health Insurance Scheme in general.Entities:
Keywords: Capitation payment; Ghana; National health insurance; Primary care provider; Subscriber trust
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27557551 PMCID: PMC4997684 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1622-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Conceptual model of effect of capitation payment on patients’ trust in primary care
Socio-demographic characteristics of respondents
| Variables (N=383) | Frequency (%) | Urban (%) | Rural (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Male | 66 (17) | 40 (60) | 26 (40) |
| Female | 317 (83) | 162 (51) | 155 (49) |
| Age | |||
| 18-31 | 121 (32) | 61 (50) | 60 (50) |
| 32-45 | 119 (31) | 65 (55) | 54 (45) |
| 46-59 | 66 (17) | 31 (47) | 35 (53) |
| 60-74 | 42 (11) | 28 (67) | 14 (33) |
| 75+ | 35 (9) | 17 (49) | 18 (51) |
| Marital status | |||
| Married | 230 (60) | 119 (52) | 111 (48) |
| Never married | 61 (16) | 34 (56) | 27 (44) |
| Divorced | 20 (5) | 13 (65) | 7 (35) |
| Widowed | 60 (16) | 29 (48) | 31 (52) |
| Other | 12 (3) | 7 (58) | 5 (42) |
| Education | |||
| Tertiary | 27 (7) | 21 (78) | 6 (22) |
| Secondary/SHS | 57 (15) | 42 (74) | 15 (26) |
| Middle/JSS | 157 (41) | 74 (47) | 83 (53) |
| Primary | 54 (14) | 27 (50) | 27 (50) |
| Never attended school | 88 (23) | 38 (43) | 50 (57) |
| Employment status | |||
| Formal | 50 (13) | 28 (56) | 22 (44) |
| Self-employed | 209 (55) | 98 (47) | 111 (53) |
| Retired | 34 (9) | 22 (65) | 12 (35) |
| Unemployed | 90 (23) | 54 (60) | 36 (40) |
| Length of NHIS membership | |||
| ≤2 years | 30 (8) | 16 (53) | 14 (47) |
| 2-3 year | 24 (6) | 9 (38) | 15 (62) |
| 3-5 years | 57 (15) | 25 (44) | 32 (56) |
| > 5 years | 167 (44) | 88 (53) | 79 (47) |
| No response | 105 (27) | 64 (61) | 41 (39) |
| Used NHIS card past 2 years | |||
| Yes | 360 (94) | 193 (54) | 167 (46) |
| No | 23 (6) | 9 (39) | 14 (61) |
Source: Authors’ household survey, 2014
Subscriber preferred choice of provider and rationale behind choice
| Parameter | All (%) | Gender | Setting | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male (%) | Female (%) | Urban (%) | Rural (%) | ||
| N=344 | n=63 | n=281 | n=188 | n=156 | |
| Level of care | |||||
| Hospital level | 238 (69) | 51 (81) | 187 (66) | 137 (73) | 101 (65) |
| Clinic level | 51 (15) | 4 (6) | 47 (17) | 21 (11) | 30 (19) |
| Lower levels | 12 (4) | 3 (5) | 9 (3) | 5 (3) | 7 (5) |
| Not indicated | 43 (12) | 5 (8) | 38 (14) | 25 (13) | 18 (11) |
| Reason behind choice | |||||
| Proximity | 139 (40) | 25 (40) | 114 (41) | 137 (73) | 101 (65) |
| Perceived quality | 129 (38) | 25 (40) | 104 (37) | 21 (11) | 30 (19) |
| Staff attitude | 27 (8) | 7 (11) | 20 (7) | 5 (3) | 7 (5) |
| Indifferent | 49 (14) | 6 (9) | 43 (15) | 25 (13) | 18 (11) |
Source: Authors’ household survey, 2014
Subscriber trust of primary care provider
| Variable (N=344) | All (%) | Male (%) | Female (%) | Chi; | Urban (%) | Rural (%) | Chi; |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| N=344 | n=63 | n=281 | n=188 | n=156 | ||
| Actively selected provider | |||||||
| Yes | 281 (82) | 57 (90) | 224 (80) | 4.543; 0.103 | 154 (82) | 127 (81) | 3.790; 0.580 |
| No | 63 (18) | 6 (10) | 57 (20) | 34 (18) | 29 (19) | ||
| Rate trust of provider | |||||||
| (Very) high | 304 (88) | 55 (87) | 249 (87) | 2.010; 0.570 | 157 (84) | 147 (94) | 3.799; 0.150 |
| Low | 38 (11) | 7 (11) | 31(11) | 29 (15) | 9 (6) | ||
| Null | 2 (1) | 1 (1) | 1 (2) | 2 (1) | 0 | ||
| Intention to switch provider | |||||||
| Yes | 41 (12) | 3 (5) | 37 (14) | 3.799; 0.150 | 26 (14) | 14 (9) | 2.839; 0.242 |
| No | 303 (88) | 60 (95) | 243 (86) | 161 (86) | 142 (91) | ||
|
| |||||||
| Would renew card upon expiry | |||||||
| Yes | 312 (91) | 55 (87) | 257(91) | 1.486; 0.476 | 165 (88) | 147 (94) | 4.553; 0.103 |
| No | 32 (9) | 8 (13) | 23 (9) | 22 (12) | 9 (6) | ||
| Would recommend NHIS to peer | |||||||
| Yes | 279 (81) | 47(75) | 232 (82) | 2.127; 0.145 | 143 (76) | 136 (87) | 6.874; 0.009 |
| No | 65 (19) | 16 (25) | 49 (18) | 45 (24) | 20 (13) | ||
| Rate satisfaction with NHIS | |||||||
| (very) high | 315 (92) | 60 (95) | 255 (91) | 2.890; 0.576 | 170 (90) | 145 (93) | 2.891; 0.576 |
| (very) low | 29 (8) | 3 (5) | 26 (9) | 18 (10) | 10 (7) | ||
| Null | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | |||
| Rate capitation payment | |||||||
| (very) good | 75 (22) | 10 (16) | 65 (23) | 1.711; 0.425 | 38 (20) | 37 (24) | 2.891; 0.576 |
| Null | 269 (78) | 53 (84) | 216 (77) | 150 (80) | 119 (76) | ||
Source: Authors’ household survey, 2014
Subscriber perception about the positive attributes of capitation payment
| Statement category (N=344) | Answer categories | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Strongly) agree | (Strongly) dis-agree | Don't Know |
χ; | |
| Frequency (%) | ||||
| Capitation will drive down cost | 239 (69) | 75 (22) | 30 (9) | |
| Male (n=63) | 37 (59) | 18 (29) | 8 (12) | 4.687; 0.196 |
| Female (n=281) | 202 (72) | 57 (20) | 22 (8) | |
| Urban (n=188) | 126 (67) | 47 (25) | 15 (8) | 3.645; 0.302 |
| Rural (n=156) | 113 (72) | 28 (18) | 15 (10) | |
| Capitation will improve quality of care | 203 (59) | 118 (34) | 23 (7) | |
| Male | 29 (46) | 27 (43) | 7 (11) | 7.190; 0.066 |
| Female | 174 (62) | 91 (32) | 16 (5) | |
| Urban | 110 (59) | 68 (36) | 10 (5) | 4.583; 0.205 |
| Rural | 93 (60) | 50 (32) | 13 (8) | |
| Capitation stops provider shopping | 248 (72) | 51 (15) | 45 (13) | |
| Male | 37 (58) | 15 (24) | 11 (18) | 7.602; 0.055 |
| Female | 211 (75) | 36 (13) | 34 (12) | |
| Urban | 131 (70) | 28 (15) | 29 (15) | 2.077; 0.557 |
| Rural | 117 (75) | 23 (15) | 16 (10) | |
| Capitation encourages better diagnosis & treatment | 278 (81) | 63 (18) | 3 (1) | |
| Male | 48 (76) | 14 (22) | 1 (2) | 1.919; 0.589 |
| Female | 230 (82) | 49 (17) | 2 (1) | |
| Urban | 138 (73) | 49 (26) | 1 (1) | 17.935; 0.000 |
| Rural | 140 (90) | 14 (9) | 2 (1) | |
| Capitation makes treatment easy and effective | 273 (79) | 67 (19) | 4 (2) | |
| Male | 47 (75) | 15 (24) | 1 (1) | 2.171; 0.538 |
| Female | 226 (80) | 52 (19) | 3 (1) | |
| Urban | 139 (74) | 47 (25) | 2 (1) | 8.636; 0.035 |
| Rural | 134 (86) | 20 (13) | 2 (1) | |
Source: Authors’ household survey, 2014
Subscriber attitude towards capitation payment
| Statement category (N=344) | Answer categories | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Strongly) agree | (Strongly) dis-agree | Don't Know |
χ; | |
| Frequency (%) | ||||
| Capitation is meant to punish the people in Ashanti | 199 (58) | 80 (23) | 65 (19) | |
| Male (n=63) | 38 (60) | 16 (25) | 9 (15) | 1.200; 0.753 |
| Female (n=281) | 161 (57) | 64 (23) | 56 (20) | |
| Urban (n=188) | 112 (60) | 45 (24) | 31 (16) | 1.811; 0.613 |
| Rural (n=156) | 87 (56) | 35 (22) | 34 (29) | |
| Capitation was brought to Ashanti because of politics | 199 (58) | 80 (23) | 65 (19) | |
| Male | 38 (60) | 16 (25) | 9 (15) | 1.200; 0.753 |
| Female | 161 (57) | 64 (23) | 56 (20) | |
| Urban | 112 (60) | 45 (24) | 31 (16) | 1.811; 0.613 |
| Rural | 87 (56) | 35 (22) | 34 (22) | |
| Capitation contributes to the death of the people | 169 (49) | 103 (30) | 72 (21) | |
| Male | 33 (52) | 15 (24) | 15 (24) | 2.160; 0.540 |
| Female | 138 (49) | 88 (31) | 57 (20) | |
| Urban | 102 (54) | 49 (26) | 37 (20) | 4.679; 0.197 |
| Rural | 67 (43) | 54 (35) | 35 (22) | |
| Capitation causes frustration at the health facilities | 223 (65) | 84 (24) | 37 (11) | |
| Male | 46 (73) | 14 (22) | 3 (5) | 3.973; 0.264 |
| Female | 177 (63) | 70 (25) | 34 (15) | |
| Urban | 131 (70) | 39 (21) | 18 (9) | 5.053; 0.168 |
| Rural | 92 (59) | 45 (29) | 19 (12) | |
Source: Authors’ household survey, 2014