Type | Working Paper |
Title | The Effect of Insurance Enrollment on Maternal and Child Health Care Utilization in Ghana |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
URL | http://webmeets.com/files/papers/res/2014/81/Health Insurance in Ghana_AEA.pdf |
Abstract | Access to and utilization of health services are concerns in poor countries. If implemented correctly, health insurance may help solve this challenge. This paper examines how participation in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) affects health care utilization in Ghana, using representative data for the whole country and an instrumental variable approach. This methodology overcomes selection and omitted variable bias. The exogenous variation in enrollment comes from unexpected membership rules variations in the District Mutual Health Insurance Schemes (DMHIS). Using the 2008 DHS and a census of all DMHIS, we find insurance membership increases the probability of: i) seeking higher quality but no greater quantity of maternal services and ii) parents becoming more active users of child curative care. IV estimates are larger than OLS ones indicating adverse selection and underlying heterogeneity in returns to NHIS participation. The instruments and results are robust to several validity checks. |
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