The cost of coverage: rural health insurance in China
Open Access
- 1 September 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Health Policy and Planning
- Vol. 11 (3) , 238-252
- https://doi.org/10.1093/heapol/11.3.238
Abstract
China has undergone great economic and social change since 1978 with far reaching implications for the health care system and ultimately for the health status of the population. The Chinese Medical Reform of the 1980s made cost recovery a primary objective. The urban population is mostly protected by generous government health insurance. A high share government budget is allocated to urban health care. Rural cooperative health insurance reached a peak in the mid-1970s when 90% of the rural population were covered. In the 1980s rural cooperative health insurance collapsed and present coverage is less than 8%. The decline has been accompanied by reports of growing equity problems in the financing of and access to health care. This article is the first in a four-year study of the impact on equity of the changes in Chinese health care financing. The article examines the relationship between rural cooperative hearth insurance as the explanatory variable and health care expenditure, curative vs. preventive expenditure and tertiary curative care expenditure as dependent variables using a natural experimental design with a ‘twin’ county as a control.Keywords
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