Abstract

People working in Ghana’s informal sector have low rates of enrolment in the publicly funded National Health Insurance Scheme. Informal sector workers, including migrant girls and women from northern Ghana working as head porters (kayayei), report challenges obtaining insurance and seeking formal health care. This article analyses how health insurance status affects kayayei migrants’ care-seeking behaviours. This mixed-methods study involved surveying 625 migrants using respondent-driven sampling and conducting in-depth interviews with a sub-sample of 48 migrants. Analyses explore health status and health seeking behaviours for recent illness/injury. Binary logistic regression modelled the effects of selected independent variables on whether or not a recently ill/injured participant (n = 239) sought health care. Although recently ill/injured participants (38.4%) desired health care, less than half (43.5%) sought care. Financial barriers overwhelmingly limit kayayei migrants from seeking health care, preventing them from registering with the National Health Insurance Scheme, renewing their expired health insurance policies, or taking time away from work. Both insured and uninsured migrants did not seek formal health services due to the unpredictable nature of out-of-pocket expenses. Catastrophic and impoverishing medical expenses also drove participants’ migration in search of work to repay loans and hospital bills. Health insurance can help minimize these expenditures, but only 17.4% of currently insured participants (58.2%) reported holding a valid health insurance card in Accra. The others lost their cards or forgot them when migrating. Access to formal health care in Accra remains largely inaccessible to kayayei migrants who suffer from greater illness/injury than the general female population in Accra and who are hindered in their ability to receive insurance exemptions. With internal migration on the rise in many settings, health systems must recognize the varied needs of populations in multi-ethnic and multilingual countries to ensure that internal migrants can access affordable, quality health services across domestic borders.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAs international and internal migration grow in scope and complexity, migrants are at risk of exclusion from universal health coverage (UHC)

  • It is paradoxical that migrants from northern Ghana, where the concentration of health facilities is lowest, cannot and do not access formal health services in Accra, where Ghana’s concentration of health facilities is highest

  • As international and internal migration grow in scope and complexity, migrants are at risk of exclusion from universal health coverage (UHC)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

As international and internal migration grow in scope and complexity, migrants are at risk of exclusion from universal health coverage (UHC). UHC ensures that everyone can access affordable, quality, essential health services and requires regular monitoring of progress in order to adapt UHC to local demographic, epidemiological and technological conditions (WHO and World Bank, 2015). The inclusion of international migrants in regional health insurance schemes, such as the European Health Insurance Card, moves some UHC systems closer towards providing truly universal care; many world regions lack such schemes, leaving international migrants poorly served by national health strategies or excluded all together. Internal migrants may become excluded from UHC or discriminated against when seeking health care. Pricing health insurance and health care expenses based on geography rather than a sliding socioeconomic scale may price rural-tourban migrants out of health services

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call