The Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA.
School of Government Alberto Lleras Camargo, Universidad de los Andes, Bogotá, Colombia.
Health Syst Reform. 2022 Jan 1;8(1):2079448. doi: 10.1080/23288604.2022.2079448.
Colombia provides a unique setting to understand the complicated interaction between health systems, health insurance, migrant populations, and COVID-19 due to its system of Universal Health Coverage and its hosting of the second-largest population of displaced persons globally, including approximately 1.8 million Venezuelan migrants. We surveyed 8,130 Venezuelan migrants and Colombian nationals across 60 municipalities using a telephone survey during the first wave of the pandemic (September through November 2020). Using self-reported enrollment in one of the several Colombian health insurance schemes, we analyzed the access to and disparities in the use of health-care services for both Colombians and Venezuelan migrants by insurance status, including access to formal health services, virtual visits, and COVID-19 testing for both groups. We found that compared with 3.6% of Colombians, 73.6% of Venezuelan telephone survey respondents remain uninsured, despite existing policies that allow legally present migrants to enroll in national health insurance schemes. Enrolling migrants in either the subsidized or contributory regime increases their access to health-care services, and equality between Colombians and Venezuelans within the same insurance schemes can be achieved for some services. Colombia's experience integrating Venezuelan migrants into their current health system through various insurance schemes during the first wave of their COVID-19 pandemic shows that access and equality can be achieved, although there continue to be challenges.
哥伦比亚拥有全民健康覆盖体系,并接纳了全球第二大的流离失所人口,其中包括约 180 万委内瑞拉移民,因此为我们理解卫生系统、健康保险、移民人口和 COVID-19 之间复杂的相互关系提供了一个独特的环境。我们在大流行的第一波期间(2020 年 9 月至 11 月)使用电话调查,对哥伦比亚 60 个城市的 8130 名委内瑞拉移民和哥伦比亚国民进行了调查。我们根据受访者自我报告的参加哥伦比亚几种健康保险计划之一的情况,分析了哥伦比亚人和委内瑞拉移民在保险状况方面获得和利用医疗服务的差异,包括两组人获得正规卫生服务、虚拟就诊和 COVID-19 检测的情况。我们发现,与 3.6%的哥伦比亚人相比,尽管存在允许合法移民参加国家健康保险计划的现有政策,但 73.6%的委内瑞拉电话调查受访者仍然没有保险。将移民纳入补贴或缴费制度可以增加他们获得医疗服务的机会,并且在相同的保险计划中,可以实现哥伦比亚人和委内瑞拉人之间的平等。哥伦比亚在 COVID-19 大流行的第一波期间,通过各种保险计划将委内瑞拉移民纳入其现有卫生系统的经验表明,虽然仍存在挑战,但可以实现获得和公平。