Abstract

The obesity rate in China has risen significantly in the past few decades. While a number of causes for the rise in obesity have been explored, little attention has been paid to the role of health insurance per se. This study aims to investigate the impact of health insurance on the risk of obesity in rural China using longitudinal data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS). We employed pooled ordinary least squares (OLS), probit estimation, and pooled two-stage least squares (2SLS) for an instrumental variable (IV). The IV model revealed that New rural cooperative medical insurance (NRCMS) participation had a significant positive impact on people’s tendency towards unhealthy lifestyles, for instances, high-fat food (8.01% for female and 7.35% for male), cigarette smoking (25% for male), heavy drinking (25% for female), sedentary activity (6.48 h/w for female and 6.48 h/w for male), waist circumference (1.97 cm for female and 1.80 cm for male), body mass index (0.58 kg/m2 for female), which in turn leads to an elevated probability of general obesity (51% for female) and abdominal obesity (24% for female and 20% for male). An “ex ante moral hazard” is prevalent in rural China, which should not be ignored by policymakers so as to minimize the related low efficiency in the process of promoting the universal coverage of insurance.

Highlights

  • Obesity is a serious public health problem that needs to be addressed urgently both in developed and developing countries [1,2,3,4]

  • Ordinary least squares (OLS) (Model 1) and the probit model (Model 2) provide baseline estimates. These are compared with a two-stage least squares (2SLS) (Model 3) instrumental variable (IV) estimation that directly address the endogeneity of insurance with health conditions

  • We utilize the national data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) to analyze the impact of New rural cooperative medical insurance (NRCMS) participation on individual health-related behaviors

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity is a serious public health problem that needs to be addressed urgently both in developed and developing countries [1,2,3,4]. While there is no argument that genetic predisposition plays an important role in obesity, the increase in obesity is mostly attributed to lifestyle choices and environmental factors, including a high-fat food dietary preference and a shift toward a sedentary lifestyle, and sex may play a role in such an association [9]. These lifestyle choices may be driven in part by the moral hazard effect

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