CBHI INDIA

Developing efficient and responsive community based micro health insurance in India

 Coordinatore ERASMUS UNIVERSITEIT ROTTERDAM 

 Organization address address: BURGEMEESTER OUDLAAN 50
city: ROTTERDAM
postcode: 3062 PA

contact info
Titolo: Mr.
Nome: Eugene
Cognome: Sophia
Email: send email
Telefono: +31 10 408 8529
Fax: +31 10 408 9092

 Nazionalità Coordinatore Netherlands [NL]
 Totale costo 4˙010˙393 €
 EC contributo 2˙999˙997 €
 Programma FP7-HEALTH
Specific Programme "Cooperation": Health
 Code Call FP7-HEALTH-2007-B
 Funding Scheme CP-SICA
 Anno di inizio 2009
 Periodo (anno-mese-giorno) 2009-07-01   -   2014-06-30

 Partecipanti

# participant  country  role  EC contrib. [€] 
1    ERASMUS UNIVERSITEIT ROTTERDAM

 Organization address address: BURGEMEESTER OUDLAAN 50
city: ROTTERDAM
postcode: 3062 PA

contact info
Titolo: Mr.
Nome: Eugene
Cognome: Sophia
Email: send email
Telefono: +31 10 408 8529
Fax: +31 10 408 9092

NL (ROTTERDAM) coordinator 1˙034˙606.00
2    Sarvajan Unnati Bodhini

 Organization address address: "Sant Nagar, East of Kailash 246"
city: New Delhi
postcode: 110065

contact info
Titolo: Dr.
Nome: Iddo
Cognome: Dror
Email: send email
Telefono: +91 99 58206611
Fax: +91 11 4174 9102

IN (New Delhi) participant 1˙002˙005.00
3    UNIVERSITAET ZU KOELN

 Organization address address: ALBERTUS MAGNUS PLATZ
city: KOELN
postcode: 50923

contact info
Titolo: Prof.
Nome: Hans Jürgen
Cognome: Rösner
Email: send email
Telefono: 492215000000
Fax: 492215000000

DE (KOELN) participant 301˙979.00
4    BAIF Development Research Foundation

 Organization address address: "Kamdhenunagar,"
city: Pune
postcode: 412 202

contact info
Titolo: Dr.
Nome: Shrikant B.
Cognome: Khadilkar
Email: send email
Telefono: +91 20 26926248
Fax: +91 (20) 26926347

IN (Pune) participant 220˙469.00
5    NIDAN

 Organization address address: "sudama bhawan, boring road"
city: Patna
postcode: 800001

contact info
Titolo: Mr.
Nome: Arbind
Cognome: Singh
Email: send email
Telefono: +91 612 2570705
Fax: +91 612 2570705

IN (Patna) participant 220˙469.00
6    Shramik Bharti

 Organization address address: "Vikas Nagar, Lakhanpur 392"
city: Kanpur
postcode: 208024

contact info
Titolo: Mr.
Nome: Rakesh
Cognome: Pandey
Email: send email
Telefono: +91 51 2258 0823
Fax: +91 99 3553 5680

IN (Kanpur) participant 220˙469.00

Mappa


 Word cloud

Esplora la "nuvola delle parole (Word Cloud) per avere un'idea di massima del progetto.

gender    care    dehat    community    cbhi    uttar    showed    experiments    enrolment    financing    pocket    poor    vaishali    pratapgarh    successful    micro    bihar    women    rural    impoverishment    pay    status    financial    healthcare    equitable    scheme    service    efficient    either    impact    made    india    affordable    education    pradesh    kanpur    population    protection    countries    found    providers    health    insurance    expenditure    schemes    rates    least    membership    responsive    expenditures   

 Obiettivo del progetto (Objective)

'Two generations of top-down decisions on health financing systems have produced very modest results for poor people, poor countries or indeed for the major donors/funders. In most developing countries, including India, the lion’s share of health spending is made out of pocket. Impoverishment, low access – especially for weaker segments of the population such as women and children – and thus bad health status are consequences. Health insurance has the potential to remedy or at least reduce the severe consequences of unforeseen health care expenditures. Recently, a growing number of community based health insurance (CBHI) schemes emerge in India and other developing countries. It is expected that CBHI can (i) help mobilizing additional resources for health financing, (ii) provide financial protection and (iii) increase access to health care and hence ultimately the health status of the rural population. Community based health insurance represent the highest hope for extension of insurance amongst the poor, drawing on experience of many western countries and Japan. However, in order to make use of the scarce resources available and build systems offering value to the poor, it is important to have a detailed and evidence based understanding on how to build an efficient and responsive CBHI-system. This proposed project sets out to close the knowledge gap on aspects important for the successful implementation of CBHI. It does so through a set of controlled field experiments through which CBHI is implemented in villages of three states of India. Rigorous longitudinal research documents the learning and makes it available for replication elsewhere. We apply quantitative research along with in depth qualitative research and spatial data. It is the project’s overall objective to: Use affordable, responsive and inclusive Community Based Health Insurance to increase: (i) Equitable access to healthcare and (ii) Financial protection.'

Introduzione (Teaser)

Out-of-pocket health care expenditure in low-income countries like India causes further impoverishment, leading to limited health care uptake. Researchers implemented three community-based health insurance (CBHI) schemes to resolve this.

Descrizione progetto (Article)

The economic security of households in India is threatened due to health shocks as most opt for private health care that they can ill-afford. Particularly in rural India, there is a heavy reliance on high-interest debt financing to pay off healthcare bills. Affordable health insurance premiums could help mitigate this situation. Micro-health insurance experiments were conducted in India under the aegis of the EU-funded project 'Developing efficient and responsive community based micro health insurance in India' (http://www.microinsuranceacademy.org/project/uttar-pradesh-and-bihar-india/ (CBHI INDIA)) to provide more equitable healthcare access and financial protection.

The Kanpur Dehat and Pratapgarh districts in Uttar Pradesh and Vaishali in Bihar were the study sites chosen on the basis of least education, dense population and largest gender disparities. The target groups were involved in designing the insurance and the benefit packages. The enrolment rates during the first and the second waves were 23% and 24% respectively. No association was found between socioeconomic status and gender on CBHI enrolment. Women with more education were more likely to enrol and those who made insurance claims or were well-informed about CBHI were more likely to renew.

Overall, results showed no impact on either enhancing access to healthcare or reducing their related expenditure. Site specific estimates showed no discernible impact in Kanpur Dehat and Vaishali for either utilization or healthcare expenditures. In Pratapgarh however, we found CBHI membership led to a decline in utilization of outpatient care. The most likely explanation is that the provider-payment system, which pays designated healthcare professional a fixed annual fee, incentivises the reduction in the quality of care offered and/or to charge more for services and drugs as compared to the uninsured who pay per visit. Overall, analysis suggests that these CBHI schemes were not functioning as anticipated. This is reflected by the dropout rates: only 17% of individuals who enrolled in 2011 renewed their membership a year later.

Though CBHI scheme outcomes were disappointing, developing insurance schemes that are adapted to meet local needs would be successful with some adjustments. Greater attention needs to be paid to the management aspects: both financial and administrative. Community funded schemes such as the CBHI by design offer a shallow risk pool, resulting in the insured and service providers to be inadequately incentivised to move the scheme forward. Monitoring aspects of the scheme need to be considerably strengthened to promote good governance and accountability of the healthcare service providers.

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