| Literature DB >> 30534601 |
Christine J Fenenga1,2, Katalin Buzasi1,3, Daniel K Arhinful4, Stephen K O Duku4,3,5, Alice Ogink1, Wouter Poortinga6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) was introduced in Ghana in 2003, enrolment is still far from the desired target of universal coverage. Low community engagement in the design and management of the system was identified as one of the main barriers. The aim of the current study was to explore the role of social capital in NHIS enrolment in two regions of Ghana, Western and Greater Accra.Entities:
Keywords: Cluster randomised controlled trial; Ghana; Health insurance; Marginal effects; Social capital; Systematic client engagement
Year: 2018 PMID: 30534601 PMCID: PMC6282266 DOI: 10.1186/s41256-018-0090-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Res Policy ISSN: 2397-0642
Fig. 1Conceptual social capital framework (Fenenga et al. [8])
Fig. 2The six steps of the intervention design
Intervention group characteristics at baseline
| Control group | Intervention group (combined) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (in years) | 37.74 | 37.81 | 0.896 |
| Sex (% women) | 55.80 | 57.05 | 0.474 |
| Region (% Western region) | 46.78 | 52.11 | 0.002*** |
| Religion (% Christian) | 90.00 | 89.88 | 0.155 |
| Household wealth | |||
| Wealth quintile 1 (%) | 16.65 | 17.71 | 0.902 |
| Wealth quintile 2 (%) | 17.40 | 17.41 | |
| Wealth quintile 3 (%) | 19.55 | 18.73 | |
| Wealth quintile 4 (%) | 22.89 | 20.84 | |
| Wealth quintile 5 (%) | 23.52 | 25.3 | |
| Highest level of completed education | |||
| No formal education (%) | 12.98 | 13.77 | 0.139 |
| Less than primary school (%) | 3.74 | 2.55 | |
| Primary school (%) | 9.94 | 9.28 | |
| Middle/junior secondary school (%) | 39.14 | 40.45 | |
| Secondary/senior secondary school (%) | 21.72 | 19.35 | |
| Vocational/polytechnical training (%) | 7.54 | 8.79 | |
| Higher education (%) | 4.94 | 5.82 | |
| Is your health better or worse than of other people of the same sex and age in the community | |||
| Better (%) | 61.62 | 59.6 | 0.01** |
| The same (%) | 34.35 | 37.48 | |
| Worse (%) | 4.02 | 2.92 | |
| The share of respondents paying for consultation and drugs during last healthcare provider visit | |||
| Pay for consultation (%) | 21.56 | 18.67 | 0.04** |
| Pay for drugs (%) | 47.23 | 46.87 | 0.838 |
Note: The p-values refer to the results of the chi-square test, except for age where independent t-test with unequal assumed variances is used; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001
Fig. 3Health insurance in the control and the combined intervention group
The effect of the intervention on insurance enrolment and the relationship between social capital and insurance
| Dependent variable: | Model 1 | Model 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Being ensured | Being ensured | |
| Intervention (IG) | 0.176 (0.142) | 0.143 (0.135) |
| Follow-up | −0.254** (0.124) | −0.153 (0.129) |
| IG x Follow-up | 0.414** (0.164) | 0.454*** (0.160) |
| HC_trust | 0.00775 (0.0466) | |
| HC_action | 0.0460 (0.0404) | |
| VC_prov1 | 0.127*** (0.0442) | |
| VC_prov2 | 0.0952* (0.0489) | |
| VC_nhis | 0.150*** (0.0510) | |
| Constant | −2.928*** (0.259) | −3.004*** (0.263) |
| Variance of intercept | 0.18*** (0.043) | 0.165*** (0.042) |
| Observations | 6007 | 5895 |
| Number of groups | 64 | 64 |
| Log pseudolikelihood | − 3556.8111 | − 3461.7883 |
Note: errors are clustered by facility; controls listed in Table 1 are included HC_trust 1 Horizontal social capital – trust, HC_action Horizontal social capital – action, VC_prov1 Vertical social capital – provider 1, VC_prov2 Vertical social capital – provider 2, VC_nhis Vertical social capital – NHIS; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001
Fig. 4Changes in the five social capital factors from baseline to follow-up. Notes: The levels (scores) of social capital are estimated from 16 survey items with principal component analysis explained in Section “Respondents and measures” and Additional file 1
The effect of the interventions on the level of social capital aspects
| Dependent variable: | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | Model 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HC_trust | HC_action | VC_prov1 | VC_prov2 | VC_nhis | |
| Follow-up | 0.227*** (0.0736) | − 0.0997 (0.0812) | 0.0712 (0.0753) | − 0.150** (0.0702) | − 0.634*** (0.0796) |
| Intervention group (IG) | −0.0224 (0.0820) | 0.111 (0.0803) | −0.0106 (0.0861) | − 0.0279 (0.110) | 0.0616 (0.0719) |
| IG x Follow-up | −0.0847 (0.108) | − 0.124 (0.108) | 0.0515 (0.0999) | − 0.0642 (0.114) | −0.0610 (0.100) |
| Constant | −0.269* (0.146) | 0.0544 (0.116) | −0.301** (0.141) | 0.264** (0.132) | 0.251*** (0.0967) |
| Variance of intercept | 0.057*** (0.015) | 0.068*** (0.014) | 0.038*** (0.008) | 0.193*** (0.038) | 0.042*** (0.009) |
| Observations | 6013 | 6013 | 6013 | 6013 | 6013 |
| Number of groups | 64 | 64 | 64 | 64 | 64 |
| Log pseudolikelihood | − 8107.2474 | − 8346.0905 | − 8445.4805 | − 7753.767 | − 8101.5881 |
Note: errors are clustered by facility, controls listed in Table 1 are included; *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1
Fig. 5The marginal effects of the interventions on enrolment by initial social capital level. Note: Marginal effects are based on models in Additional file 1: Table C.3 containing interaction terms