The effect of community engagement on healthcare utilization and health insurance enrollment in Ghana: Results from a randomized experiment
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Health Economics
Abstract
Abstract
Health insurance enrollment in many Sub-Saharan African countries is low, even
with highly subsidized premiums and exemptions for vulnerable populations. One
possible explanation is low service quality, which results in a low valuation of
health insurance. Using a randomized control trial in 64 primary health care facilities
in Ghana, this study assesses the impact of a community engagement intervention
designed to improve the quality of healthcare and health insurance services
on households living nearby the facilities. Although the intervention improved
the medical-technical quality of health services, our results show that households'
subjective perceptions of the quality of healthcare and insurance services did not
increase. Nevertheless, the likelihood of illness and concomitant healthcare utilization
reduced, and especially households who were not insured at baseline were more
likely to enroll in health insurance. The results show that solely increasing the technical
quality of care is not sufficient to increase households' subjective assessments
of healthcare quality. Still, improving technical quality can directly contribute to
health outcomes and further increase health insurance coverage, especially among
the previously uninsured.
Description
Research article