| Literature DB >> 35145602 |
Oladimeji Akeem Bolarinwa1, Tanimola Makanjuola Akande1, Wendy Janssens2, Kwasi Boahene3, Tobias Rinke de Wit2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: a subsidized community health insurance programme in Kwara State, Nigeria was temporarily suspended in 2016 in anticipation of the roll-out of a state-wide health insurance scheme. This article reports the adverse consequences of the scheme´s suspension on enrollees´ healthcare utilization.Entities:
Keywords: Community-based; Kwara; health insurance; suspension
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35145602 PMCID: PMC8797047 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.41.10.27978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
Figure 1major policy milestone, study period and clients´ enrolment trend in Kwara community health insurance programme between 2015 and 2018
socio-demographic and socio-economic characteristics of the respondents
| Socio-demography | n (%) | Median (IQR) |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 153 (25.5) | |
| Female | 447 (74.5) | |
| Age group (years) ≤20 | 21 (3.5) | |
| 21 - 30 | 141 (23.5) | |
| 31 - 40 | 125 (20.8) | |
| 41 - 50 | 91 (15.2) | |
| 51 - 60 | 84 (14.0) | |
| 61 - 70 | 76 (12.7) | |
| ≥ 71 | 62 (10.3) | |
|
|
| |
|
| ||
| No formal education | 255 (42.5) | |
| Less than primary education | 20 (3.3) | |
| Primary education | 77 (12.8) | |
| JSS education | 22 (3.7) | |
| SSS education | 79 (13.2) | |
| Post-secondary | 121 (20.2) | |
| Quranic education | 26 (4.3) | |
|
| ||
| Married | 463 (77.2) | |
| Single | 33 (5.5) | |
| Divorced | 1 (0.1) | |
| Widowed | 103 (17.2) | |
|
| ||
| Semi-urban | 443 (73.8) | |
| Rural | 157 (26.2) | |
|
| ||
| Yoruba | 387 (64.5) | |
| Nupe | 193 (32.2) | |
| Hausa | 16 (2.6) | |
| Others | 4 (0.7) | |
|
| ||
| Islam | 499 (83.2) | |
| Christianity | 101 (16.8) | |
|
| ||
| 1 (poorest) | 126 (21.0) | |
| 2 | 119 (19.8) | |
| 3 | 131 (21.8) | |
| 4 | 108 (18.0) | |
| 5 (richest) | 116 (19.4) |
JSS: junior secondary school; SSS: senior secondary school
preferences and constraints in ability to pay for and accessibility to healthcare after KCHIP suspension
| Preferences/constraints/Coping mechanism | n (%) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Yes | 572 (95.3) |
| No | 28 (4.7) |
|
| |
| Pay for everything | 444 (74.0) |
| Pay some, but at reduced costs | 131 (21.8) |
| Not pay for anything | 25 (4.2) |
|
| |
| No | 198 (33.0) |
| Yes | 402 (67.0) |
|
| |
| Due to the suspension | 184 (30.8) |
| Due to the economic situation of the country | 68 (11.2) |
| Due to both the suspension and the economic situation of the country | 150 (25.0) |
|
| |
| From personal savings | 380 (63.3) |
| Donation from friends and families | 208 (34.7) |
| Borrowing (friends/families) | 71 (11.8) |
| Borrowing from local money lenders | 4 (0.7) |
| Sell properties | 3 (0.5) |
| Loan (co-operatives/banks) | 4 (0.7) |
| Support from trade unions | 5 (0.8) |
| Support from religious groups (church or mosque) | 4 (0.7) |
| Have not been ill since program stopped | 29 (4.8) |
| Others identified coping | 66 (11.0) |
|
| |
| Petty trading | 17 (25.8) |
| Husband | 13 (19.7) |
| Children | 3 (4.5) |
| Others | 33 (50.0) |
|
| |
| Much worse | 78 (13.0) |
| Worse | 296 (49.3) |
| Same | 172 (28.7) |
| Better | 38 (6.3) |
| Much better | 10 (1.7) |
| Don't know | 6 (1.0) |
|
| |
| Contribution (Ajo) | 284 (47.3) |
| Religious group | 171 (28.5) |
| Community group | 112 (18.7) |
| Cooperative | 105 (17.5) |
| Trade union | 32 (5.3) |
| Social club | 49 (8.2) |
| None of the above | 152 (25.3) |
^ Multiple responses
factors associated with constraints in ability to pay for healthcare services after re-enrollment suspension
| Factors | Constrained ability to pay | X2 | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes n (%) | No n (%) | |||
|
|
|
| ||
| Male | 114 (74.5) | 39 (25.5) | ||
| Female | 288 (64.4) | 159 (35.6) | ||
|
|
|
| ||
| Semi-urban | 283 (63.9) | 160 (36.1) | ||
| Rural | 119 (75.8) | 38 (24.2) | ||
|
|
|
| ||
| Yoruba | 212 (54.8) | 175 (45.2) | ||
| Nupe | 173 (89.6) | 20 (10.4) | ||
| Hausa | 14 (87.5) | 2 (12.5) | ||
| Others | 3 (75.0) | 1 (25.0) | ||
|
|
|
| ||
| 1 | 98 (77.8) | 28 (22.2) | ||
| 2 | 87 (73.1) | 32 (26.9) | ||
| 3 | 86 (65.6) | 45 (34.4) | ||
| 4 | 66 (61.1) | 42 (38.9) | ||
| 5 | 65 (56.0) | 51 (44.0) | ||
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|
|
| ||
| Government failure to provide funds | 142 (62.6) | 85 (37.4) | ||
| Hygeia no longer fund the program | 99 (83.9) | 19 (16.1) | ||
| Stoppage of foreign fund | 3 (42.9) | 4 (57.1) | ||
| No reason given | 139 (67.5) | 67 (32.5) | ||
| Others | 9 (56.2) | 7 (43.8) | ||
|
|
|
| ||
| Yes | 22 (52.4) | 20 (47.6) | ||
| No | 380 (68.1) | 178 (31.9) | ||
|
|
|
| ||
| Yes | 33 (74.3) | 114 (25.7) | ||
| No | 72 (46.2) | 84 (53.8) | ||
Statistical significance; X2: chi-square
predictors of constrained ability to pay for healthcare services after the suspension of the program
| Factor | β | p-value | Crude OR | 95% lower | CI upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male gender | 0.479 | 0.023* | 1.614 | 1.069 | 2.436 |
| Age | 0.004 | 0.454 | 1.004 | 0.994 | 1.013 |
| Rural inhabitants | 0.571 | 0.007* | 1.771 | 1.171 | 2.677 |
| Yoruba ethnic group | -1.920 | <0.001* | 0.147 | 0.091 | 0.236 |
| Higher wealth quintiles | -0.255 | <0.001* | 0.775 | 0.685 | 0.877 |
| Utilize only KSCHIP facilities while in the program | 0.663 | 0.039* | 1.941 | 1.032 | 3.648 |
| Enrollees with acute illness or injury | 1.217 | <0.001* | 3.377 | 2.309 | 4.939 |
| Enrollees with chronic illness | 0.260 | 0.154 | 1.298 | 0.907 | 1.856 |
| Membership of financial group | 0.379 | 0.068 | 1.461 | 0.972 | 2.195 |
Significance level (p) < 0.05
Figure 2out-patients´ visits by month for the year 2016 across the public and private health facilities
Figure 3in-patient visits by month for the year 2016 across public and private health facilities