Factors Influencing Enrolment in the National Health Insurance Scheme among Slum Dwellers in Agbogbloshie

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Master of Public Health
Title Factors Influencing Enrolment in the National Health Insurance Scheme among Slum Dwellers in Agbogbloshie
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
URL http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh:8080/xmlui/bitstream/handle/123456789/21693/FACTORS INFLUENCING ENROLMENT​IN THE NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE SCHEME AMONG SLUM DWELLERS IN​AGBOGBLOSHIE.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
Abstract
It is estimated that about 43% of urban dwellers in Ghana live in slums, with 1.3million
slum dwellers living in Accra. Slum dwellers live in overcrowded and substandard
housing, lacking safe water and sanitation systems and access to quality health care
services.
With increasing slum populations, equitable access to quality health care services remains
a challenge. Social health protection systems such as the National Health Insurance
Scheme are mechanisms that countries use to address the challenges related to providing
access to health care services to their citizens, especially the poorer segments of the
population such as slum dwellers.
It has been shown that active membership in the National Health Insurance Scheme stood
at 36.8% in 2013. The proportion of slum dwellers enrolled in the National Health
Insurance Scheme and accessing care is little known. This study aims at assessing factors
influencing enrolment in the National Health Insurance Scheme among slum dwellers in
Agbogbloshie.
This study was a descriptive cross-sectional survey involving 371 household heads in
Agbogbloshie. Multi-stage sampling was used to select household heads for the study
from May-June 2015.
Results showed that 24% (373) of slum dwellers were enrolled in the National Health
Insurance Scheme and this is 13% lower than the national average of 36.8% in 2013,
implying that slum dwellers are not enrolling. More than half (52.5%) of households who
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recorded an illness had no health insurance and close to forty-percent (143) of them
sought care at Chemical shops/Pharmacies. The factors affecting enrolment among slum
dwellers at the individual level were sex, type of employment, perceived health status of
the household head and their inability to afford the premium. At the household level,
socioeconomic status of the household, and facility used for seeking care were factors
affecting enrolment in the National Health Insurance Scheme.
As Ghana aims at achieving Universal Coverage, policy makers should consider
expanding the exemption policy under the National Health Insurance Scheme to include
social groups such as slum dwellers with financial difficulties to enable them access
health care

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