Abstract

IntroductionMany schemes have been implemented by the government of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic to provide equity in health service utilisation. Initially, health service utilisations were fully supported by the government and were subsequently followed by the Revolving Drug Fund. In the 2000s, four health financing schemes, namely the Social Security Organization, the State Authority for Social Security, the Health Equity Fund and Community-Based Health Insurance (CBHI), were introduced with various target groups. However, as these voluntary schemes have suffered from a very low enrolment rate, the government decided to pilot the National Health Insurance (NHI) scheme, which offers a flat, co-payment system for health service utilisation. This study aims to assess the effectiveness of the NHI in terms of its accessibility and in providing financial protection from catastrophic health expenditure.MethodsThe data collection process was implemented in hospitals of two districts of Savannakhet province. A structured questionnaire was used to retrieve all required information from 342 households; the information comprised of the socioeconomics of the household, accessibility to health services and financial payment for both outpatient and inpatient department services. Binary logistic regression models were used to discover the impact of NHI in terms of accessibility and financial protection. The impact of NHI was then compared with the outcomes of the preceding, voluntary CBHI scheme, which had been the subject of earlier studies.ResultsUnder the NHI, it was found that married respondents, large households and the level of income significantly increased the probability of accessibility to health service utilisation. Most importantly, NHI significantly improved accessibility for the poorest income quantile. In terms of financial protection, households with an existing chronic condition had a significantly higher chance of suffering financial catastrophe when compared to households with healthy members. As probability of catastrophic expenditure was not affected by income level, it was indicated that NHI is able to provide equity in financial protection.ConclusionThe models found that the NHI significantly enhances accessibility for poor income households, improving health service distribution and accessibility for the various income levels when compared to the CBHI coverage. Additionally, it was also found that NHI had enhanced financial protection since its introduction. However, the NHI policy requires a dramatically high level of government subsidy; therefore, there its long-term sustainability remains to be determined.

Highlights

  • Many schemes have been implemented by the government of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic to provide equity in health service utilisation

  • Under the National Health Insurance (NHI), it was found that married respondents, large households and the level of income significantly increased the probability of accessibility to health service utilisation

  • The models found that the NHI significantly enhances accessibility for poor income households, improving health service distribution and accessibility for the various income levels when compared to the Community-Based Health Insurance (CBHI) coverage

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Summary

Introduction

Many schemes have been implemented by the government of the Lao People’s Democratic Republic to provide equity in health service utilisation. In the 2000s, four health financing schemes, namely the Social Security Organization, the State Authority for Social Security, the Health Equity Fund and Community-Based Health Insurance (CBHI), were introduced with various target groups. As these voluntary schemes have suffered from a very low enrolment rate, the government decided to pilot the National Health Insurance (NHI) scheme, which offers a flat, co-payment system for health service utilisation. The cost of obtaining and accessing proper healthcare in developing countries is relatively higher when compared to richer and more developed countries due to the prevalence of fees or health service charges combined with the high transportation costs encountered by people who have to travel long distances for treatment; these may include both medical and non-medical expenditures. Developing countries are unable to collect significant amounts of tax revenue, face insufficient and volatile external funds, suffer from high costs of accessing healthcare services, have inequalities in the health services provided, lack service-minded health practitioners, have inefficient financial management and transparency issues, demonstrate limited accountability in their financing system, and lack scientific evidence for priority policy setting [1]

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