Abstract

BackgroundThe impact of user–fee policies on the equity of health care utilization and households’ financial burdens has remained largely unexplored in Latin American and the Caribbean, as well as in upper–middle–income countries. This paper assesses the short– and long–term impacts of Jamaica’s user–fee–removal for children in 2007.MethodsThis study utilizes 14 rounds of data from the Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions (JSLC) for the periods 1996 to 2012. JSLC is a national household survey, which collects data on health care utilization and among other purposes for planning. Interrupted time series (ITS) analysis was used to examine the immediate impact of the user–fee–removal policy on children’s health care utilization and households’ financial burdens, as well as the impact in the medium– to long–term.ResultsImmediately following the implementation of user–fee–removal, the odds of seeking for health care if the children fell ill in the past 4 weeks increased by 97% (odds ratio 2.0, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1 to 3.5, P = 0.018). In the short–term (2007–2008), health care utilization increased at a faster rate among children not in poverty than children in poverty; while this gap narrowed after 2008. There was minimal difference in health care utilization across wealth groups in the medium– to long–term. The household’s financial burden (health expenditure as a share of household’s non–food expenditures) reduced by 6 percentage points (95% CI: –11 to –1, P = 0.020) right after the policy was implemented and kept at a low level. The difference in financial burden between children in poverty and children not in poverty shrunk rapidly after 2007 and remained small in subsequent years.ConclusionsUser–fee–removal had a positive impact on promoting health care utilization among children and reducing their household health expenditures in Jamaica. The short–term and the medium– to long–term results have different indications: In the short–term, the policy deteriorated the equity of access to health care for children, while the equity status improved fast in the medium– to long–term.

Highlights

  • Immediately following the implementation of user–fee–removal, the odds of seeking for health care if the children fell ill in the past 4 weeks increased by 97% (odds ratio 2.0, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1 to 3.5, P = 0.018)

  • The household’s financial burden reduced by 6 percentage points right after the policy was implemented and kept at a low level

  • User–fee–removal had a positive impact on promoting health care utilization among children and reducing their household health expenditures in Jamaica

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Summary

Methods

This study utilizes 14 rounds of data from the Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions (JSLC) for the periods 1996 to 2012. This study uses data from the Jamaica Survey of Living Conditions (JSLC) – a nationally representative household survey, which consists of six core modules: demographic characteristics, household consumption, health, education, housing, and social protection. Some of the earlier waves are incomplete: for example, the education level of the household head, which is an important control variable in the regression analysis, has 26.9% missing values before 2004. To solve this problem, when conducting ITS analysis, we only presented the regression results using data from 2004–2012 in the main text to ensure the key variables are with high data quality. We provided the ITS regression results using data from 1996–2012 in Tables S2, S3 and S4 in Online Supplementary Document

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