Department of Biological and Environmental Science, Kampala International University, 20000, Kampala, Uganda.
Department of Environmental Sciences, National Open University of Nigeria, Abuja, 900211, Nigeria.
Int J Equity Health. 2021 Oct 26;20(1):235. doi: 10.1186/s12939-021-01574-4.
There is an increasing global concern of financing poor people who live in low- and middle-income countries. The burden of non-communicable diseases of these people is, by in large, connected to a lack of access to effective and affordable medical care, weak financing, and delivery of health services. Policymakers have assumed, until recently, that poor people in developing countries would not pay health insurance premiums for the cost of future hospitalization. The emergence of community-based health financing (CBHF) has brought forth a renewed and empowered alternative. CBHF schemes are designed to be sustainable, varying in size, and well organized. Developing countries, such as Nigeria, have been testing and finetuning such schemes in the hope that they may 1 day reciprocate high-income countries.
A sample size of 372 respondents was used to assess the slums of Awka, the capital city of Anambra State, Nigeria, and empirically evaluate the socio-demographic characteristics of those who uptake CBHF using the provider Jamii Bora Trust (JBT). Cross-sectional research used a quantitative research approach with the instrumentality of structured questionnaires. Descriptive analysis was adopted to determine the socio-demographic characteristics of those who have CBHF uptake in Awka and evaluate the presence and benefits of CBHF in the city's slums.
The results show that more youth and middle-aged persons from 18 to 50 years are more insured (i.e., 73.8% combined) than those who are over 50 years of age. Gender distribution confirm more females (i.e., 61.9%) to be health-insured than their male counterpart (i.e., 38.1%). This perhaps reflected the reproductive roles by women and the fact that women have better health-seeking behavioral attitude. Moreover, the results correlate with previous studies that confirm women are more involved in local sustainable associations in low-income settings, of this nature, in sub-Saharan Africa. Corroborating this further, married people are more insured (i.e., 73.8%) than those who are not married (i.e., 26.2%) and insured members report higher use of hospitalization care than the non-insured.
CBHF uptake favored members in the lower income quintiles who are more likely to use healthcare services covered by the JBT scheme. This confirmed that prepayment schemes and the pooling of risk could reduce financial barriers to healthcare among the urban poor. Recommendations are suggested to improve enrollment levels in the CBHF programs.
全球越来越关注为生活在中低收入国家的穷人提供资金。这些人患非传染性疾病的负担在很大程度上与无法获得有效和负担得起的医疗保健、融资薄弱以及卫生服务提供有关。政策制定者直到最近才认为,发展中国家的穷人不会为未来住院治疗的费用支付医疗保险费。社区为基础的卫生融资(CBHF)的出现带来了一种新的、有力的选择。CBHF 计划旨在具有可持续性,规模大小不一,组织良好。尼日利亚等发展中国家一直在测试和调整此类计划,希望有朝一日能够效仿高收入国家。
使用 372 名受访者的样本量评估尼日利亚阿南布拉州首府阿瓦卡的贫民窟,并使用提供者 Jamii Bora Trust(JBT)对参与 CBHF 的人的社会人口特征进行实证评估。横断面研究采用定量研究方法,使用结构化问卷作为手段。采用描述性分析来确定阿瓦卡参与 CBHF 的人的社会人口特征,并评估城市贫民窟中 CBHF 的存在和益处。
结果表明,18 至 50 岁的年轻人和中年人(合计 73.8%)比 50 岁以上的人更有保险,而性别分布则证实女性(61.9%)比男性(38.1%)更有保险。这也许反映了女性的生殖角色以及女性更愿意寻求健康的行为态度。此外,这些结果与之前的研究相吻合,这些研究证实,在这种情况下,在撒哈拉以南非洲,女性更多地参与低收入环境中的地方可持续协会。进一步证实这一点的是,已婚人士的保险率(73.8%)高于未婚人士(26.2%),并且保险成员报告的住院护理使用率高于非保险成员。
CBHF 的采用有利于收入较低五分之一的成员,他们更有可能使用 JBT 计划涵盖的医疗保健服务。这证实了预付款计划和风险分担可以减少城市贫困人口获得医疗保健的经济障碍。建议提出了改善 CBHF 计划参保水平的建议。