Although China has greatly expanded health insurance coverage,
financial protection remains insufficient. Policy-makers should focus
on designing improved insurance plans by expanding the benefit package,
redesigning cost sharing arrangements and provider payment methods and
developing more effective expenditure control strategies.
To assess the degree to which the Chinese people are protected
from catastrophic household expenditure and impoverishment from medical
expenses and to explore the health system and structural factors
influencing the first of these outcomes.
Data were derived from the Fourth National Health Service
Survey. An analysis of catastrophic health expenditure and
impoverishment from medical expenses was undertaken with a sample of
55 556 households of different characteristics and located in rural and
urban settings in different parts of the country. Logistic regression
was used to identify the determinants of catastrophic health
expenditure.
The rate of catastrophic health expenditure was 13.0%; that of
impoverishment was 7.5%. Rates of catastrophic health expenditure were
higher among households having members who were hospitalized, elderly,
or chronically ill, as well as in households in rural or poorer regions.
A combination of adverse factors increased the risk of catastrophic
health expenditure. Families enrolled in the urban employee or resident
insurance schemes had lower rates of catastrophic health expenditure
than those enrolled in the new rural corporative scheme. The need for
and use of health care, demographics, type of benefit package and type
of provider payment method were the determinants of catastrophic health
expenditure.
Read more: Bulletin of WHO
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