Health Insurance and Child Health: Evidence from Seguro Popular

Type Working Paper
Title Health Insurance and Child Health: Evidence from Seguro Popular
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
URL https://paa.confex.com/paa/2016/mediafile/ExtendedAbstract/Paper3674/Child Nutrition SegPop.pdf
Abstract
Public health insurance programs are being expanded across the globe despite limited evidence regarding their impacts on population health. Exploiting the roll-out of Seguro Popular, a largescale program that provides public health insurance to about half Mexico’s population, this research isolates the causal impact of the program on child health and nutrition measured by height-for-age. Drawing on insights from the biology of human linear growth during the first few years of life, we use rich longitudinal population-representative data, the Mexican Family Life Survey, in combination with administrative program data and establish that Seguro Popular has had, at best, a modest impact on child nutritional status. Program effects in a community are larger after the program has been established for several years, suggesting supply-side factors may be critical impediments to fulfilling program goals. The results have important implications for the design, roll-out, and evaluation of public health programs.

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