Centre for Research on Ageing, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK.
Social Statistics & Demography, ESRC Centre for Population Change, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO17 1BJ, UK.
Int J Equity Health. 2018 Apr 23;17(1):49. doi: 10.1186/s12939-018-0760-x.
Ghana is currently undergoing a profound demographic transition, with large increases in the number of older adults in the population. Older adults require greater levels of healthcare as illness and disability increase with age. Ghana therefore provides an important and timely case study of policy implementation aimed at improving equal access to healthcare in the context of population ageing. This paper examines the determinants of National Health Insurance (NHIS) enrolment in Ghana, using two different surveys and distinguishing between younger and older adults. Two surveys are used in order to investigate consistency in insurance enrolment. The comparison between age groups is aimed at understanding whether determinants differ for older adults. Previous studies have mainly focused on the enrolment of young and middle aged adults; thus by widening the focus to include older adults and taking into account differences in their demographic and socio-economic characteristics this paper provides a unique contribution to the literature.
Using data from the 2007-2008 Study on Global Ageing and Adult Health (SAGE) and the 2012-2013 Ghanaian Living Standards Survey (GLSS) the determinants of NHIS enrolment among younger adults (aged 18-49) and older adults (aged 50 and over) are compared. Logistic regression explores the socio-economic and demographic determinants of NHIS enrolment and multinomial logistic regression investigates the correlates of insurance drop out.
Similar results for people aged 18-49 and people aged 50 plus were revealed, with older adults having a slightly lower probability of dropping out of insurance coverage compared to younger adults. Both surveys confirm that education and wealth increase the likelihood of NHIS affiliation. Further, residential differences in insurance coverage are found, with greater NHIS coverage in urban areas. The findings give assurance that both datasets (SAGE and GLSS) are suitable for research on insurance affiliation in Ghana.
The paper indicates that although the gap in coverage among rich and poor and urban and rural residents appears to have decreased, these factors still determine NHIS coverage of younger and older adults. The same holds for education. Increasing efforts are needed to ensure equal access to healthcare.
加纳目前正在经历深刻的人口转型,人口中老年人口数量大幅增加。老年人随着年龄的增长,对医疗保健的需求也越来越大。因此,加纳为研究人口老龄化背景下改善医疗保健平等获取机会的政策实施提供了一个重要且及时的案例。本文使用两次不同的调查,将年轻人和老年人区分开来,研究了加纳国家健康保险(NHIS)参保的决定因素。使用两次调查是为了调查参保的一致性。对年龄组进行比较是为了了解老年人的决定因素是否不同。以前的研究主要集中在年轻人和中年人的参保上;因此,本文通过将研究对象扩大到老年人,并考虑到他们在人口和社会经济特征方面的差异,为文献做出了独特的贡献。
本文使用了 2007-2008 年全球老龄化和成人健康研究(SAGE)和 2012-2013 年加纳生活水平调查(GLSS)的数据,比较了年轻人(18-49 岁)和老年人(50 岁及以上)参保的社会经济和人口决定因素。逻辑回归探讨了 NHIS 参保的社会经济和人口决定因素,多项逻辑回归调查了保险退保的相关性。
对于 18-49 岁和 50 岁以上的人群,结果相似,与年轻人相比,老年人的保险退保概率略低。两项调查都证实,教育和财富增加了 NHIS 参保的可能性。此外,还发现了居住在城市地区的人保险覆盖率更高的情况。这些发现保证了两个数据集(SAGE 和 GLSS)都适合研究加纳的保险参保情况。
本文表明,尽管富人和穷人、城市和农村居民之间的覆盖差距似乎有所缩小,但这些因素仍然决定了年轻人和老年人的 NHIS 覆盖范围。教育也是如此。需要加大力度确保平等获得医疗保健。