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Citation

Otieno, Peter; Angeles, Gustavo; Quiñones, Sarah; van Halsema, Vincent; Novignon, Jacob; & Palermo, Tia M. (2022). Health Services Availability and Readiness Moderate Cash Transfer Impacts on Health Insurance Enrolment: Evidence from the Leap 1000 Cash Transfer Program in Ghana. BMC Health Services Research, 22(1), 599. PMCID: PMC9066897

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Expanding health insurance coverage is a priority under Sustainable Development Goal 3. To address the intersection between poverty and health and remove cost barriers, the government of Ghana established the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). Government further linked NHIS with the Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) 1000 cash transfer program by waiving premium fees for LEAP 1000 households. This linkage led to increased NHIS enrolment, however, large enrolment gaps remained. One potential reason for failure to enroll may relate to the poor quality of health services.
METHODS: We examine whether LEAP 1000 impacts on NHIS enrolment were moderated by health facilities' service availability and readiness.
RESULTS: We find that adults in areas with the highest service availability and readiness are 18 percentage points more likely to enroll in NHIS because of LEAP 1000, compared to program effects of only 9 percentage points in low service availability and readiness areas. Similar differences were seen for enrolment among children (20 v. 0 percentage points) and women of reproductive age (25 v. 10 percentage points).
CONCLUSIONS: We find compelling evidence that supply-side factors relating to service readiness and availability boost positive impacts of a cash transfer program on NHIS enrolment. Our work suggests that demand-side interventions coupled with supply-side strengthening may facilitate greater population-level benefits down the line. In the quest for expanding financial protection towards accelerating the achievement of universal health coverage, policymakers in Ghana should prioritize the integration of efforts to simultaneously address demand- and supply-side factors.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-022-07964-w

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

BMC Health Services Research

Author(s)

Otieno, Peter
Angeles, Gustavo
Quiñones, Sarah
van Halsema, Vincent
Novignon, Jacob
Palermo, Tia M.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9066897

Data Set/Study

Ghana’s Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty (LEAP) 1000 Program

Continent/Country

Ghana

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Angeles - 0000-0003-4598-152X