426 results
Search Results
2. Preferences for innovations in healthcare delivery models in the Swiss elderly population: a latent class, choice modelling study.
- Author
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Nicolet, Anna, Perraudin, Clémence, Krucien, Nicolas, Wagner, Joël, Peytremann-Bridevaux, Isabelle, and Marti, Joachim
- Subjects
DIFFUSION of innovations ,RESEARCH funding ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH insurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,HEALTH care reform ,SURVEYS ,ELECTRONIC health records ,MEDICAL care for older people ,HEALTH care teams ,INTEGRATED health care delivery - Abstract
Background: With the increasing number of people affected by multiple chronic conditions, it is essential for public-health professionals to promote strategies addressing patient needs for coordinated care. We aim to explore preference heterogeneity for better-coordinated care delivery models in Swiss older adults, and identify profiles of individuals more open to healthcare reforms. Methods: A DCE (discrete choice experiment) survey was developed online and on paper for the Swiss adults aged 50þ, following best practice. To elicit preferences, we estimated a latent class model allowing grouping individuals with similar preferences into distinct classes, and examined what background characteristics contributed to specific class membership. Results: The optimal model identified three classes with different openness to reforms. Class 1 (49%) members were concerned with premium increases and were in favour of integrated care structures with care managed by interprofessional teams. Individuals in class 2 (19%) were younger, open to reforms, and expressed the needs for radical changes within the Swiss healthcare system. Class 3 respondents (32%) were strongly reluctant to changes. Conclusions: Our study goes beyond average preferences and identifies three distinct population profiles, a majority open to reforms on specific aspects of care delivery, a smallest group in favour radical changes, and a third strongly against changes. Therefore, tailored approaches around healthcare reforms are needed, e.g. explaining the role of interprofessional teams in coordinating care, electronic health records and insurance premium variation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Can Voluntary Health Insurance for Non-reimbursed Expensive New Treatments Be Just?
- Author
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Smids, Jilles and Bunnik, Eline M
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HEALTH insurance ,PRICE increases ,THERAPEUTICS ,MUNICIPAL services ,SELF-esteem ,PATIENT refusal of treatment - Abstract
Public healthcare systems are increasingly refusing (temporarily) to reimburse newly approved medical treatments of insufficient or uncertain cost-effectiveness. As both patient demand for these treatments and their list prices increase, a market might arise for voluntary additional health insurance (VHI) that covers effective but (very) expensive medical treatments. In this paper, we evaluate such potential future practices of VHI in public healthcare systems from a justice perspective. We find that direct (telic) egalitarian objections to unequal access to expensive treatments based on different ability to afford VHI do not stand up to scrutiny. However, such unequal access might lead to loss of self-respect among individuals, or loss of fraternity within society, rendering it more difficult for citizens to interact on equal moral footing. This would be problematic from a relational egalitarian perspective. Moreover, the introduction of VHI might turn out to have negative consequences for the comprehensiveness and/or the quality of the public healthcare services that are offered to all patients equally through basic health insurance. These consequences must be weighed against potential health gains and the value of liberty. We conclude that governments should be careful when considering the introduction of VHI in public healthcare systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Can Wealth Buy Health? A Model of Pecuniary and Non-Pecuniary Investments in Health.
- Author
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Margaris, Panos and Wallenius, Johanna
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NATIONAL health insurance ,HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH expectancy ,MEDICAL care costs ,LIFE expectancy ,LABOR productivity - Abstract
In this paper, we develop a life cycle model that features pecuniary and non-pecuniary investments in health in order to rationalize the socioeconomic gradients in health and life expectancy in the United States. Agents accumulate health capital, which affects labor productivity, utility, the distribution of medical spending shocks, and life expectancy. We find that unequal health insurance coverage plays a negligible role in generating the observed gaps in health and longevity. Universal health insurance increases preventive medical spending but not time spent in health promoting activities, as individuals are no longer worried about avoiding high curative medical expenditure shocks due to increased health insurance coverage. Our findings suggest that differences in lifetime income, preferences, and health shocks are the main determinants of inequality in life expectancy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Citizen engagement in national health insurance in rural western Kenya.
- Author
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Maritim, Beryl, Koon, Adam D, Kimaina, Allan, and Goudge, Jane
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NATIONAL health insurance ,HEALTH insurance ,RURAL health ,HOUSEHOLD employees ,MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Effective citizen engagement is crucial for the success of social health insurance, yet little is known about the mechanisms used to involve citizens in low- and middle-income countries. This paper explores citizen engagement efforts by the National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF) and their impact on health insurance coverage within rural informal worker households in western Kenya. Our study employed a mixed methods design, including a cross-sectional household survey (n = 1773), in-depth household interviews (n = 36), six focus group discussions with community stakeholders and key informant interviews (n = 11) with policymakers. The findings reveal that NHIF is widely recognized, but knowledge of its services, feedback mechanisms and accountability systems is limited. NHIF enrolment among respondents is low (11%). The majority (63%) are aware of NHIF, but only 32% know about the benefit package. There was higher awareness of the benefit package (60%) among those with NHIF compared to those without (28%). Satisfaction with the NHIF benefit package was expressed by only 48% of the insured. Nearly all respondents (93%) are unaware of mechanisms to provide feedback or raise complaints with NHIF. Of those who are aware, the majority (57%) mention visiting NHIF offices for assistance. Most respondents (97%) lack awareness of NHIF's performance reporting mechanisms and express a desire to learn. Negative media reports about NHIF's performance erode trust, contributing to low enrolment and member attrition. Our study underscores the urgency of prioritizing citizen engagement to address low enrolment and attrition rates. We recommend evaluating current citizen engagement procedures to enhance citizen accountability and incorporate their voices. Equally important is the need to build the capacity of health facility staff handling NHIF clients in providing information and addressing complaints. Transparency and information accessibility, including the sharing of performance reports, will foster trust in the insurer. Lastly, standardizing messaging and translations for diverse audiences, particularly rural informal workers, is crucial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Evaluating health policies with subnational disparities: a text-mining analysis of the Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance Scheme in China.
- Author
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Liu, Kai, Liu, Wenting, and He, Alex Jingwei
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HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH equity ,POLICY analysis - Abstract
Subnational disparities in most health systems often defy 'one-size-fits-all' approach in policy implementation. When local authorities implement a national policy in a decentralized context, they behave as a strategic policy actor in specifying the central mandates, selecting appropriate tools and setting key implementation parameters. Local policy discretion leads to diverse policy mixes across regions, thus complicating evidence-based evaluations of policy impacts. When measuring complex policy reforms, mainstream policy evaluation methodologies have tended to adopt simplified policy proxies that often disguise distinct policy choices across localities, leaving the heterogeneous effects of the same generic policy largely unknown. Using the emerging 'text-as-data' methodology and drawing from subnational policy documents, this study developed a novel approach to policy measurement through analysing policy big data. We applied this approach to examine the impacts of China's Urban Employee Basic Medical Insurance (UEBMI) on individuals' out-of-pocket (OOP) spending. We found substantial disparities in policy choices across prefectures when categorizing the UEBMI policy framework into benefit-expansion and cost-containment reforms. Overall, the UEBMI policies lowered enrollees' OOP spending in prefectures that embraced both benefit-expansion and cost-containment reforms. In contrast, the policies produced ill effects on OOP spending of UEBMI enrollees and uninsured workers in prefectures that carried out only benefit-expansion or cost-containment reforms. The micro-level impacts of UEBMI enrolment on OOP spending were conditional on whether prefectural benefit-expansion and cost-containment reforms were undertaken in concert. Only in prefectures that promulgated both types of reforms did UEBMI enrolment reduce OOP spending. These findings contribute to a comprehensive text-mining measurement approach to locally diverse policy efforts and an integration of macro-level policy analysis and micro-level individual analysis. Contextualizing policy measurements would improve the methodological rigour of health policy evaluations. This paper concludes with implications for health policymakers in China and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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7. Estimating the binary endogenous effect of insurance on doctor visits by copula‐based regression additive models.
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Marra, Giampiero, Radice, Rosalba, and Zimmer, David M.
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COPULA functions ,REGRESSION analysis ,HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH care reform ,INSURANCE ,SELECTION bias (Statistics) ,PHYSICIANS - Abstract
Summary: The paper estimates the causal effect of having health insurance on healthcare utilization, while accounting for potential endogeneity bias. The topic has important policy implications, because health insurance reforms implemented in the USA in recent decades have focused on extending coverage to the previously uninsured. Consequently, understanding the effects of those reforms requires an accurate estimate of the causal effect of insurance on utilization. However, obtaining such an estimate is complicated by the discreteness inherent in common measures of healthcare usage. The paper presents a flexible estimation approach, based on copula functions, that consistently estimates the coefficient of a binary endogenous regressor in count data settings. The relevant numerical computations can be easily carried out by using the freely available GJRM R package. The empirical results find significant evidence of favourable selection into insurance. Ignoring such selection, insurance appears to increase doctor visit usage by 62% but, adjusting for it, the effect increases to 134%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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8. Genetic discrimination: emerging ethical challenges in the context of advancing technology.
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Chapman, Carolyn Riley, Mehta, Kripa Sanjay, Parent, Brendan, and Caplan, Arthur L
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GENETIC testing ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH insurance ,GENETIC Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (U.S.) ,DEBATE - Abstract
Genetic testing is becoming more widespread, and its capabilities and predictive power are growing. In this paper, we evaluate the ethical justifications for and strength of the US legal framework that aims to protect patients, research participants, and consumers from genetic discrimination in employment and health insurance settings in the context of advancing genetic technology. The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) and other laws prohibit genetic and other health-related discrimination in the United States, but these laws have significant limitations, and some provisions are under threat. If accuracy and predictive power increase, specific instances of use of genetic information by employers may indeed become ethically justifiable; however, any changes to laws would need to be adopted cautiously, if at all, given that people have consented to genetic testing with the expectation that there would be no genetic discrimination in employment or health insurance settings. However, if our society values access to healthcare for both the healthy and the sick, we should uphold strict and broad prohibitions against genetic and health-related discrimination in the context of health insurance, including employer-based health insurance. This is an extremely important but often overlooked consideration in the current US debate on healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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9. The Effects of Health Insurance within Families: Experimental Evidence from Nicaragua.
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Fitzpatrick, Anne and Thornton, Rebecca
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HEALTH insurance ,FAMILIES ,MEDICAL personnel ,HOUSEHOLDS ,SIBLINGS - Abstract
This paper measures the causal effects of parent enrollment into voluntary health insurance on healthcare utilization among insured and uninsured children in Nicaragua. The study utilizes a randomized trial and age-eligibility cutoff in which insurance subsidies were randomly allocated to parents that covered their dependent children under 12; children age 12 and older were not eligible for coverage. Among eligible children, the insurance increased utilization at covered providers by 0.56 visits and increased overall utilization by 1.3 visits. Ineligible children with insured parents experienced 1.7 fewer healthcare visits driven by parent, not sibling, enrollment. The results suggest complementarities across healthcare provider type and provide evidence that households reallocate resources across all members in response to changes in healthcare prices for some. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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10. Socioeconomic Inequalities and Molecular Risk for Aging in Young Adulthood.
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Potente, Cecilia, Chumbley, Justin, Xu, Wenjia, Levitt, Brandt, Cole, Steven W, Ravi, Sudharshan, Bodelet, Julien Stephane, Gaydosh, Lauren, Harris, Kathleen Mullan, and Shanahan, Michael J
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging , *MATHEMATICAL models , *METABOLISM , *GENE expression , *HEALTH insurance reimbursement , *SOCIAL classes , *MESSENGER RNA , *GENE expression profiling , *HEALTH insurance , *THEORY , *RESEARCH funding , *BODY mass index , *SMOKING , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Diverse manifestations of biological aging often reflect disparities in socioeconomic status (SES). In this paper, we examine associations between indicators of SES and an mRNA-based aging signature during young adulthood, before clinical indications of aging are common. We use data from wave V (2016–2018) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, a nationally representative study of adults aged 33–43 years, with transcriptomic data from a subset of 2,491 participants. Biological aging is measured using 1) a composite transcriptomic aging signature previously identified by Peters et al.'s out-of-sample meta-analysis (Nat Commun. 2015;6:8570) and 2) 9 subsets that represent functional pathways of coexpressed genes. SES refers to income, education, occupation, subjective social status, and a composite measure combining these 4 dimensions. We examine hypothesized mechanisms through which SES could affect aging: body mass index, smoking, health insurance status, difficulty paying bills, and psychosocial stress. We find that SES—especially the composite measure and income—is associated with transcriptomic aging and immune, mitochondrial, ribosomal, lysosomal, and proteomal pathways. Counterfactual mediational models suggest that the mediators partially account for these associations. The results thus reveal that numerous biological pathways associated with aging are already linked to SES in young adulthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. Causal mediation analysis with double machine learning.
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Farbmacher, Helmut, Huber, Martin, Lafférs, Lukáš, Langen, Henrika, and Spindler, Martin
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MACHINE learning ,HEALTH insurance ,BOTTLENECKS (Manufacturing) ,LEARNING goals - Abstract
This paper combines causal mediation analysis with double machine learning for a data-driven control of observed confounders in a high-dimensional setting. The average indirect effect of a binary treatment and the unmediated direct effect are estimated based on efficient score functions, which are robust with respect to misspecifications of the outcome, mediator, and treatment models. This property is key for selecting these models by double machine learning, which is combined with data splitting to prevent overfitting. We demonstrate that the effect estimators are asymptotically normal and |$n^{-1/2}$| -consistent under specific regularity conditions and investigate the finite sample properties of the suggested methods in a simulation study when considering lasso as machine learner. We also provide an empirical application to the US National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, assessing the indirect effect of health insurance coverage on general health operating via routine checkups as mediator, as well as the direct effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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12. Can health insurance improve access to quality care for the Indian poor?
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Michielsen, Joris, Criel, Bart, Devadasan, Narayanan, Soors, Werner, Wouters, Edwin, and Meulemans, Herman
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HEALTH insurance ,POLITICAL science ,MEDICAL care ,SOCIAL services ,BENEFICIARIES ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH institutes - Abstract
Purpose Recently, the Indian government launched health insurance schemes for the poor both to protect them from high health spending and to improve access to high-quality health services. This article aims to review the potentials of health insurance interventions in order to improve access to quality care in India based on experiences of community health insurance schemes. Data sources PubMed, Ovid MEDLINE (R), All EBM Reviews, CSA Sociological Abstracts, CSA Social Service Abstracts, EconLit, Science Direct, the ISI Web of Knowledge, Social Science Research Network and databases of research centers were searched up to September 2010. An Internet search was executed. Study selection One thousand hundred and thirty-three papers were assessed for inclusion and exclusion criteria. Twenty-five papers were selected providing information on eight schemes. Data extraction A realist review was performed using Hirschman's exit-voice theory: mechanisms to improve exit strategies (financial assets and infrastructure) and strengthen patient's long voice route (quality management) and short voice route (patient pressure). Results of data synthesis All schemes use a mix of measures to improve exit strategies and the long voice route. Most mechanisms are not effective in reality. Schemes that focus on the patients’ bargaining position at the patient-provider interface seem to improve access to quality care. Conclusion Top-down health insurance interventions with focus on exit strategies will not work out fully in the Indian context. Government must actively facilitate the potential of CHI schemes to emancipate the target group so that they may transform from mere passive beneficiaries into active participants in their health. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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13. WELFARE-STATE RETRENCHMENT: THE PARTISAN EFFECT REVISITED.
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Amable, Bruno, Gatti, Donatella, and Schumacher, Jan
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PUBLIC welfare ,WELFARE state ,ECONOMIC policy ,WELFARE economics ,POLITICAL doctrines ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
This paper aims to shed light on the role of the 'ideology' of political parties in shaping the evolution of the welfare state in 18 developed democracies, by providing empirical findings on the determinants of social-programme entitlements and social spending over the period 1981-99. The paper shows that structural change is a major determinant of the extent of social protection. Our results suggest that overall spending is driven up by structural change. On the other hand, strong structural change has a negative influence on welfare entitlements measured by the net rate of sickness insurance. Partisan influence plays an important role in the dynamics of the welfare state. Left-wing governments strengthen the positive effect of shocks on aggregate social expenditure, while right-wing governments undertake even stronger cutbacks in replacement rates as a reaction to structural change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Analysing the impact of private health insurance on inequities in health care utilization: a longitudinal study from China.
- Author
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Wu, Runguo and Ercia, Angelo
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MEDICAL care costs ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,HEALTH insurance ,RESEARCH funding ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Since the early 2000s, Chinese government has sought to encourage the growth of private health insurance (PHI) while simultaneously expanding the breadth of coverage in its social health insurance (SHI) system. This paper examines how the prevalence of PHI has changed during this period and the extent to which PHI contributed to the growth of horizontal and geographical inequities with a focus on healthcare utilization. National data from China Health and Nutrition Survey between 2000 and 2015 were analysed using a multilevel modelling approach. The analysis investigated the impact of SHI membership as related to PHI uptake, PHI enrolees' utilization of health services and out-of-pocket (OOP) expenses. This study found being covered by an SHI scheme reduced the uptake of PHI between 2004 and 2015. Having PHI caused an increase in utilizing outpatient care but did not affect OOP expenses. Coverage prevalence of PHI in a residential community was positively associated with the average level of healthcare utilization. Coverage prevalence of PHI and its effects on healthcare utilization varied geographically. The findings suggest that expanding the role of PHI was not effective without clear support from government policy. Furthermore, the expansion of PHI may cause an increase in horizontal and geographical inequities in healthcare utilization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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15. Impact of Ethiopia's Community Based Health Insurance on Household Economic Welfare.
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Yilma, Zelalem, Mebratie, Anagaw, Sparrow, Robert, Dekker, Marleen, Alemu, Getnet, and Bedi, Arjun S.
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HEALTH insurance ,COMMUNITY health services ,HOUSEHOLDS ,RURAL population ,MEDICAL care costs ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
In 2011, in an attempt to increase access to health care and reduce household vulnerability to out-of-pocket health expenditure, the Government of Ethiopia launched a Community-Based Health Insurance Scheme (CBHI). This paper uses three rounds of household survey data, collected before and after the introduction of the CBHI pilot, to assess the impact of the scheme on household consumption, income, indebtedness, and livestock holdings. We find that enrollment leads to a 5 percentage point—or 13%—decline in the probability of borrowing and is associated with an increase in household income. There is no evidence that enrolling in the scheme affects consumption or livestock holdings. Our results show that the scheme reduces reliance on potentially harmful coping responses such as borrowing. This paper adds to the relatively small body of work that rigorously evaluates the impact of CBHI schemes on economic welfare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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16. "The Neurosis That Has Possessed Us": Political Repression in the Cold War Medical Profession.
- Author
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CHOWKWANYUN, MERLIN
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MEDICINE ,COMMUNISM & medicine ,MCCARTHYISM ,COLD War, 1945-1991 ,NATIONAL health insurance ,HISTORY of medicine - Abstract
Political repression played a central role in shaping the political complexion of the American medical profession, the policies it advocated, and those allowed to function comfortably in it. Previous work on the impact of McCarthyism and medicine focuses heavily on the mid-century failure of national health insurance (NHI) and medical reform organizations that suffered from McCarthyist attacks. The focus is national and birds-eye but says less about the impact on the day-to-day life of physicians caught in a McCarthyist web; and how exactly the machinery of political repression within the medical profession worked on the ground. This study shifts orientation by using the abrupt dismissal of three Los Angeles physicians from their jobs as a starting point for exploring these dynamics. I argue that the rise of the medical profession and the repressive state at mid-century, frequently studied apart, worked hand-in-hand, with institutions from each playing symbiotic and mutually reinforcing roles. I also explore tactics of resistance -- rhetorical and organizational -- to medical repression by physicians who came under attack. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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17. Bridging the gap with a gender lens: How two implementation research datasets were repurposed to inform health policy reform in Kenya.
- Author
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Suchman, Lauren, Appleford, Gabrielle, Owino, Edward, and Seefeld, Charlotte Avery
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HEALTH care reform ,GENDER inequality ,HEALTH policy ,SEX discrimination ,POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
Policies as they are written often mask the power relations behind their creation (Hull, 2008). As a result, not only are policies that appear neat on the page frequently messy in their implementation on the ground, but the messiness of implementation, and implementation science, often brings these hidden power relations to light. In this paper, we examine the process by which different data sources were generated within a programme meant to increase access to quality private healthcare for the poorest populations in Kenya, how these sources were brought and analyzed together to examine gender bias in the large-scale rollout of Kenya's National Hospital Insurance Fund (NHIF) beyond public hospitals and civil service employees, and how these findings ultimately were developed in real time to feed into the NHIF reform process. We point to the ways in which data generated for implementation science purposes and without a specific focus on gender were analyzed with a policy implementation analysis lens to look at gender issues at the policy level, and pay particular attention to the role that the ongoing close partnership between the evaluators and implementers played in allowing the teams to develop and turn findings around on short timelines. In conclusion, we discuss possibilities for programme evaluators and implementers to generate new data and feed routine monitoring data into policy reform processes to create a health policy environment that serves patients more effectively and equitably. Implementation science is generally focused on programmatic improvement; the experiences in Kenya make clear that it can, and should, also be considered for policy improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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18. The Effect of Publicly Provided Health Insurance on Education Outcomes in Mexico.
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Alcaraz, Carlo, Chiquiar, Daniel, José Orraca, María, and Salcedo, Alejandrina
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HEALTH insurance ,EDUCATION ,SCHOOL enrollment ,EDUCATIONAL finance ,HEALTH programs ,STANDARDIZED tests - Abstract
In this paper we study the causal effect of a large expansion of publicly provided health insurance on school enrollment rates and on children's academic performance using the case of Mexico. Access to free health insurance could improve education outcomes directly by making household members healthier or indirectly by raising the amount of resources available for education expenses. Using a panel of municipalities from 2007 to 2010, we find that the expansion of the Mexican public health insurance program, Seguro Popular, had a large positive, statistically significant effect on school enrollment rates and on standardized test scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Family ties and the crowding out of long-term care insurance.
- Author
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Costa-Font, Joan
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LONG-term care insurance ,MARKET failure ,SELF-insurance ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
Insurance for long-term care (LTC) has developed only moderately compared to other areas of welfare, which has been explained variously as the result of market failures, public misconceptions of the risk of LTC needs, and intergenerational contracts. This paper offers a cultural explanation for the limited LTC insurance development in Europe. It argues that family ties, by enhancing informal care-giving duties, inhibit individuals' expected (public and private) insurance coverage. The empirical analysis of the paper exploits cross-country and sub-group variability of a representative database of European Union member states, containing records on LTC coverage and family structure. Drawing upon two measures of familistic culture or family ties, we find a negative association between family ties and expected coverage of LTC for different sub-samples. These results are robust to a set of checks for different definitions of family ties and controls, and for a sub-sample of first- and second-generation migrants. Policy implications suggest that widespread expansion of LTC coverage might need to accommodate existing familistic cultural norms to avoid insurance crowding out. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
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20. “Worse than Being Married”: The Exodus of British Doctors from the National Health Service to Canada, c. 1955–75.
- Author
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Wright, David, Mullally, Sasha, and Cordukes, Mary Colleen
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PUBLIC health ,PHYSICIANS ,HEALTH insurance ,LABOR mobility ,TRANSNATIONALISM ,EMPLOYMENT in foreign countries ,FOREIGN workers ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Despite a sizeable literature on the evolution of health insurance in Britain and Canada, there is virtually no research on the transnational migration of physicians between these countries in the immediate postwar period. This article hopes to address this neglected subject. Three inter-related topics will be examined. First, the paper will summarize the debate over physician emigration from the National Health Service (NHS) in postwar Britain. It will demonstrate how British social scientists and politicians began to come to grips with a major demographic exodus of British-trained doctors in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Second, it will analyze the changing health human resource situation in 1960s Canada, which focused, for practical and cultural reasons, on General Medical Council of Britain licensed practitioners. Third, through oral interviews of British-trained physicians who settled in Canada during the 1960s, it will examine the professional and personal reasons why physicians left Britain for Canada. It reveals that, among a myriad of personal issues that motivated a physician to leave the NHS, the inflexibility and hierarchical nature of British medicine loomed very large. The paper will conclude by reflecting on the contemporary significance of this fascinating historical phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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21. A National Health Service, By Comparison.
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Freeman, Richard
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HISTORY of public health ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
The National Health Service (NHS) has always been compared to other things, to other organisations and systems both at home and abroad This paper explores those comparisons, beginning with the origins of national public health care in Lloyd George's study of German social insurance, and ending with Gordon Brown's claims for the NHS as 'the best insurance policy in the world'. It considers the comparisons and contrasts made for and with the NHS at the time of its foundation and the comparison of state and market around 1990, before reviewing the contemporary function of comparison as form and basis of health governance, The paper presents three related patterns of thought: one prompted by encounter with the other, one sustained by metaphor and one developed in more formal, analytic comparison. It concludes by discussing why comparison itself is such a dangerous and contested thing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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22. Legal perspectives on black box recording devices in the operating environment.
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Dalen, A. S. H. M., Legemaate, J., Schlack, W. S., Legemate, D. A., and Schijven, M. P.
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MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH insurance ,LEGAL literature ,PERSONALLY identifiable information ,DATA protection - Abstract
Copyright of British Journal of Surgery is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Financing mental health services in low- and middle-income countries.
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Anna Dixon, David McDaid, Martin Knapp, and Claire Curran
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MENTAL health ,MEDICAL care financing ,DEVELOPING countries ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
Mental disorders account for a significant and growing proportion of the global burden of disease and yet remain a low priority for public financing in health systems globally. In many low-income countries, formal mental health services are paid for directly by patients out-of-pocket and in middle-income countries undergoing transition there has been a decline in coverage. The paper explores the impact of health care financing arrangements on the efficient and equitable utilization of mental health services. Through a review of the literature and a number of country case studies, the paper examines the impact of financing mental health services from out-of-pocket payments, private health insurance, social health insurance and taxation. The implications for the development of financing systems in low- and middle-income countries are discussed.International evidence suggests that charging patients for mental health services results in levels of use which are below socially efficient levels as the benefits of the services are distributed according to ability to pay, resulting in inequitable access to care. Private health insurance poses three main problems for mental health service users: exclusion of mental health benefits, limited access to those without employment and refusal to insure pre-existing conditions. Social health insurance may offer protection to those with mental health problems. However, in many low- and middle-income countries, eligibility is based on contributions and limited to those in formal employment (therefore excluding many with mental health problems). Tax-funded systems provide universal coverage in theory. However, the quality and distribution of publicly financed health care services makes access difficult in practice, particularly for rural poor communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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24. Cash Transfers and Health: Evidence from Tanzania.
- Author
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Evans, David K, Holtemeyer, Brian, and Kosec, Katrina
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HEALTH insurance ,SCHOOL attendance ,CLINICS ,HEALTH programs ,OLDER people - Abstract
How do cash transfers conditioned on health clinic visits and school attendance impact health-related outcomes? Examining the 2010 randomized introduction of a program in Tanzania, this paper finds nuanced impacts. An initial surge in clinic visits after 1.5 years—due to more visits by those already complying with program health conditions and by non-compliers—disappeared after 2.5 years, largely due to compliers reducing above-minimal visits. The study finds significant increases in take-up of health insurance and the likelihood of seeking treatment when ill. Health improvements were concentrated among children ages 0–5 years rather than the elderly, and took time to materialize; the study finds no improvements after 1.5 years, but 0.76 fewer sick days per month after 2.5 years, suggesting the importance of looking beyond short-term impacts. Reductions in sick days were largest in villages with more baseline health workers per capita, consistent with improvements being sensitive to capacity constraints. These results are robust to adjustments for multiple hypothesis testing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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25. Exploring challenges, threats and innovations in global health promotion.
- Author
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Massuda, Adriano, Titton, Cesar, and Moysés, Simone Tetu
- Subjects
HEALTH promotion ,MEDICAL education ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,HUMAN rights ,HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,PRACTICAL politics ,QUALITY assurance ,SCIENCE ,TECHNOLOGY ,WORLD health ,HEALTH care industry ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,WELL-being ,AT-risk people ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Global health faces a broad spectrum of old and new challenges. Besides epidemiological problems, political conflicts, economic crisis and austerity policies are jeopardizing progress towards Universal Health Coverage (UHC), affecting the most vulnerable populations. During the 22nd International Union for Health Promotion and Education (IUHPE) World Conference on Health Promotion held in Curitiba, Brazil, in 2016, challenges and threats for global health, in addition to a wide range of innovative experiences in health promotion, were discussed with participants from 65 countries. At the end of the conference, a public statement was approved claiming for Democracy and Human Rights in all countries around the world as essential conditions for the promotion of health and equity. In this paper, we explore challenges, threats and innovations in global health promotion. We use scientific literature, analysis of the current situation of the Brazilian health system, and material presented during the 22nd IUHPE World Conference. Also, we discuss strategies to strengthen health systems, policies and practices through the approach of STI and illustrative local experiences presented at the congress mentioned above, including examples developed in the city of Curitiba. We conclude that STI is crucial to support strengthening local health systems, design effective intersectoral public policies, scaling up innovative initiates, and skilling staff in addressing the contemporary challenges. Finally, the Declaration of the 22nd World Conference on Health Promotion of the IUHPE is a fundamental policy statement based on the prioritization of democracy and human rights as essential conditions for the promotion of health and equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Political economy, stakeholder voices, and saliency: lessons from international policies regulating insurer use of genetic information.
- Author
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Prince, Anya E R
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,HUMAN genetics ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,STAKEHOLDERS ,INSURANCE companies ,DECISION making - Abstract
A decade ago, Congress passed the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA), with the goals to address fear of genetic discrimination and prevent adverse health insurance and employment decisions on the basis of one's genetic information. Yet, fear of discrimination remains because other insurers, notably life, long-term care, and disability insurers, are not covered by the law. Therefore, there have been persistent murmurings for a 'GINA 2.0' to extend the protections of the original law. Although it is plausible to assume that the insurance industry has the political economy to control future regulation, given the saliency of genetic discrimination, other stakeholders and bureaucrats may have greater influence. This paper explores the history of policy in four countries—the United Kingdom, Sweden, Australia, and Canada. Each country provides examples of continued policy debate and change following an initial period of reliance on insurance industry self-regulation, with change generally occurring over the objection of the insurance industry. This article argues that US insurers, regulators, and stakeholders should negotiate a consensus solution for insurer use of genetic information that balances between social and economic considerations. Without compromise, continued saliency and a weakened political economy of insurers will foster continued entrenched debate on the issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. How does managed competition affect hospital prices in a social health insurance system? The Colombian case.
- Author
-
Fernando, Ruiz, Leticia, Avila-Burgos, J., Trujillo Antonio, and Antonio J, Trujillo
- Subjects
MANAGED competition (Medical care) ,HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy - Abstract
This paper studies the effect on hospital service prices of a health system reform that allows managed selective contracting and regulation as a means for efficiency and price competition. Cross-sectional data about prices and market structure were analysed from a pool of 20 markets which includes 15 million Colombians. A multilevel regression method comparing three different market settings was performed. The analysis evaluates the effects of insurer choice, hospital quality and market characteristics using a nationwide health services transactional database. A Hirshmann-Herfindahl index was applied to evaluate the markets concentration. Among the results, bilateral monopolies were made evident, both in insurance and hospital markets. Insurer selective contracting policy has the greatest impact on pricing with hospital monopoly heavy effect on health service prices. Colombian government has a challenge in regulating managed competition in order to maintain competition and access to healthcare. Health reforms using market competition as a mechanism for efficiency should follow closely health services market evolution in order to introduce effective regulatory policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Aging and Demographic Transition in Ghana: State of the Elderly and Emerging Issues.
- Author
-
Kpessa-Whyte, Michael
- Subjects
AGING ,DEMOGRAPHY ,VITAL statistics ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Although the population of Ghana is young and generally youthful, there is evidence of rapid increases in the size of the elderly cohort. Although demographic projections estimate that the proportion of the population younger than 15 years will experience continuous decline overtime due in part to decline in fertility, the rise in the elderly population is expected to also continue due to declining mortality rates resulting in longevity. Unfortunately, the growth in the elderly proportion of the population is occurring at the same time traditional systems of protection and care for the aged are breaking down on account of urbanization, socioeconomic development, and globalization. This has implications for public policy and the overall wellbeing of the elderly. This paper provides a snapshot overview of the demographic dynamics of Ghana focusing on the characteristics of aging, the challenges confronting the elderly, policy interventions, and gaps, as well as some pertinent issues including emerging research that are shaping deliberations about the elderly in the country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Amendment Politics and Agenda Setting: A Theory with Evidence from the US House of Representatives.
- Author
-
Magleby, Daniel B., Monroe, Nathan W., and Robinson, Gregory
- Subjects
LEGISLATION ,LEGISLATIVE amendments ,HEALTH insurance ,PRO-life movement - Abstract
Much recent work on legislative policy making has focused on the implications of agenda power. Yet, a critical step of the legislative process--floor amendments-- has been almost entirely ignored in the most prominent theories of legislative decision making. In this paper, we fill this gap by developing a theoretical treatment of agenda setting at the amendment stage. Specifically, our theoretical approach defines the relationship between agenda setting at the amendment stage and outcomes at final passage. We test several implications using data from the US House of Representatives, and show that amendments do mitigate some of the majority party's agenda setting advantage by moderating initial proposals away from the majority party position. However, amendments do not systematically undermine the majority party's negative agenda control, as we find that amendment rolls do not increase the incidence of final passage rolls for the majority party. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Assessing health insurance literacy in Switzerland: first results from a measurement tool.
- Author
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Bardy, Tess L. C.
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,SURVEYS ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: Health insurance literacy (HIL) is crucial for individuals to make informed-decisions and navigate complex choice-based health insurance systems. However, there is a lack of evidence on HIL in countries outside the US, with Switzerland no exception. Methods: Using the HILM-CH, a survey instrument developed to measure HIL in Switzerland, this study first describes the answers to the HILM-CH. Second, the study uses ordinary least squares and quantile regressions to investigate the associations between the HIL score and demographic, socioeconomic, health, and preference factors in the German, French, and Italian Swiss regions. Results: A third of the population faces difficulties in finding health insurance information. Understanding it and managing the financial aspects of the Swiss health insurance system pose the biggest barriers to the population. The HIL score significantly and positively correlates with age and financial risk, while non-Swiss individuals have lower HIL scores. No association was found between HIL, gender, education and time preference. There is a small health gradient, with more doctor visits associated with higher HIL in the lowest quantiles of the HIL score. Similarly, wealthier individuals in the Swiss German part of Switzerland have a higher HIL when choosing their health insurance. Conclusion: This study provides important insights into Swiss HIL and its associated factors. These findings contribute to the international literature on HIL and highlight the importance of understanding variations in HIL and various factors in choice-based health insurance systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The rise of obesity in Europe: an economic perspective.
- Author
-
Brunello, Giorgio, Michaud, Pierre-Carl, and Sanz-de-Galdeano, Anna
- Subjects
OBESITY ,NUTRITION disorders ,HEALTH ,HEALTH insurance ,OVERWEIGHT persons ,WEIGHT loss ,ADVERTISING ,VENDING machines - Abstract
Obesity in Europe is rising. This paper investigates the economic rationales for public intervention to control obesity. We present new empirical evidence showing that family background is related to obesity among young European adults. This evidence provides a strong basis for intervention on equity grounds, particularly targeted towards children. The case for intervention on efficiency grounds is less clear-cut and in most cases the evidence is relatively weak. We find insufficient evidence that information deficiencies are important, as the majority of Europeans appear to be aware of the bad consequences of obesity on health. We also find that the potential health insurance externality -- non-obese effectively subsidizing obese individuals -- is small. In support of policy intervention, we show that there are product and labour market imperfections. Obese employees earn less than the non-obese. We also find that there is a remarkably high proportion of individuals with self-control problems, who fail to stick to their self-declared weight-related plans. Regulations that affect fast food advertisements and the location and access to fast food vending machines and establishments may help these individuals in controlling their weight. --- Giorgio Brunello, Pierre-Carl Michaud and Anna Sanz-de-Galdeano [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The role of community-based organizations in household ability to pay for health care in Kilifi District, Kenya.
- Author
-
Molyneux, Catherine, Hutchison, Beryl, Chuma, Jane, and Gilson, Lucy
- Subjects
HEALTH policy ,HEALTH equity ,MEDICAL care of poor people ,MEDICAL care costs ,COMMUNITY organization ,HEALTH insurance ,MICROFINANCE - Abstract
There is growing concern that health policies and programmes may be contributing to disparities in health and wealth between and within households in low-income settings. However, there is disagreement concerning which combination of health and non-health sector interventions might best protect the poor. Potentially promising interventions include those that build on the social resources that have been found to be particularly critical for the poor in preventing and coping with illness costs. In this paper we present data on the role of one form of social resource—community-based organizations (CBOs)—in household ability to pay for health care on the Kenyan coast. Data were gathered from a rural and an urban setting using individual interviews (n = 24), focus group discussions (n = 18 in each setting) and cross-sectional surveys (n = 294 rural and n = 576 urban households). We describe the complex hierarchy of CBOs operating at the strategic, intermediate and local level in both settings, and comment on the potential of working through these organizations to reach and protect the poor. We highlight the challenges around several interventions that are of particular international interest at present: community-based health insurance schemes; micro-finance initiatives; and the removal of primary care user fees. We argue the importance of identifying and building upon organizations with a strong trust base in efforts to assist households to meet treatment costs, and emphasize the necessity of reducing the costs of services themselves for the poorest households. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Toward Maintaining and Improving the Quality of Long-Term Care: The Current State and Issues Regarding Home Helpers in Japan under the Long-Term Care Insurance System.
- Author
-
Satoko, HOTTA
- Subjects
LONG-term care insurance ,LONG-term health care ,HOME care services ,HEALTH insurance ,INSURANCE - Abstract
In Japan, where the population is aging at a speed unequaled by any other country in the world, there has been a rapid increase in the use of long-term care services, following the adoption of the Long-Term Care Insurance System. The increase is seen mostly in home-visit care services, and the need for such services is expected to increase even further in the years ahead. This paper reviews previous studies on long-term care insurance service market in Japan, focusing especially on home helpers. The first section of this paper introduces the framework of the Long-Term Care Insurance System and the current state of the long-term care insurance service market. The second section examines the systems and working conditions regarding home helpers. Finally, the third section analyzes the job performance skills of home helpers and development thereof. Through these observations, this paper aims to introduce the measures proposed to be effective for maintaining and improving the quality of long-term care services, and for consistent provision of such services, by focusing mainly on employment management that enables helper skill development. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Actor management in the development of health financing reform: health insurance in South Africa, 1994–1999.
- Author
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Stephen Thomas and Lucy Gilson
- Subjects
HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
Health reform is inherently political. Sound technical analysis is never enough to guarantee the adoption of policy. Financing reforms aimed at promoting equity are especially likely to challenge vested interests and produce opposition. This article reviews the Health Insurance policy development in South Africa between 1994 and 1999. Despite more than 10 years of debate, analysis and design, no set of social health insurance (SHI) proposals had, by 1999, secured adequate support to become the basis for an implementation plan. In contrast, proposals to re-regulate the health insurance industry were speedily developed and implemented at the end of this period. The processes of actor engagement and management, set against policy goals and design details, were central to this experience.Adopting a grounded approach to analysis of primary interview data and a range of documentary material, this paper explores the dynamics between reform drivers engaged in directing policy change and a range of other actors. It describes the processes by which actors were drawn into health insurance policy development, the details of their engagement with each other, and it identifies where deliberate strategies of actor management were attempted and the results for the reform process. The primary drivers of this process were the Minister of Health and the unit responsible for health financing and economics in the national Department of Health Directorate of Health Financing and Economics, with support from members of the South African academic community. These actors worked within and through a series of four ad hoc policy advisory committees which were the main fora for health insurance policy development and the regulation of private health insurance. The different experiences in each committee are reviewed and contrasted through the lens of actor management. Differences between these drivers and opposition from other actors ultimately derailed efforts to establish adequate support for any form of SHI, even as regulatory proposals received sufficient support to be enacted in legislation. Drawing on this South African experience together with a simple analytical framework, the authors highlight five potential strategies by which reform drivers of any policy process could create alliances of support sufficient to overcome potential opposition to proposed policy changes. As little is currently known on how to manage the process of engaging actors in reform processes, these findings provide a foundation for further analysis of this issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Development of the rural health insurance system in China.
- Author
-
YUANLI LIU
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL productivity ,INSURANCE ,MEDICAL care costs ,HEALTH insurance ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Ever since the collapse of the once successful Rural Cooperative Medical System (RCMS) in the early 1980s, when China transformed its system of collective agricultural production to private production, many rural communities, especially the poorer residents, have faced several major problems. In 1993, insurance coverage for rural residents was already low, at 12.8%. By 1998, only 9.5% of the rural population was insured. User charges have effectively blocked access for many rural residents who lack adequate income to purchase basic health care when needed.Impoverishment due to medical expenses is also a serious problem, which begs the question: why has there been no vigorous development of the rural health insurance system in China despite the country’s rapid economic growth? This paper analyzes the major underlying reasons for the lack of rural health insurance in China. We found that lack of demand for the voluntary community financing schemes and inadequate government policies are the two major hindrances. Recently, the Chinese government announced a new rural health financing policy that relies on ‘matching-funds’ by the central and local governments as well as household contributions. The potential for success of this new model might be inferred from China’s past experiences, as well as from the pilot projects that are underway. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The role of community-based health insurance within the health care financing system: a framework for analysis.
- Author
-
BENNETT, SARA
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care financing ,HEALTH policy ,EQUITY (Law) ,FINANCIAL policy - Abstract
There is increasing advocacy for community-based health insurance (CBHI) schemes as part of a broader solution to health care financing problems in low-income countries, but to date there is very limited understanding of how CBHI schemes interact with other elements of a health care financing system. This paper aims to set out a preliminary conceptual framework for understanding such interactions, and highlights the kind of research questions raised by such a framework. A basic conceptual map of a CBHI scheme is developed, and extensions added to this map that incorporate (1) effects upon non-members of schemes, (2) government subsidies to providers, (3) government subsidies to schemes, and (4) issues raised by the existence of multiple risk-pooling schemes in a particular context. The utility of a broader approach to analyzing/assessing CBHI schemes is illustrated through examination of two policy issues, namely (1) coordination of CBHI risk pools and government risk pools, and (2) equity implications of CBHI schemes and the role of government subsidies in such schemes. It is concluded that there is a strong need for empirical work to explore how CBHI schemes and the broader health care financing system interact, and that even if individual schemes achieve their own objectives (in terms of equity, efficiency etc.), this does not necessarily imply that such objectives will be achieved at the system level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Legislating for Care: A Comparative Analysis of Long‐term Care Insurance Laws in Japan and Germany.
- Author
-
WEBB, Philippa
- Subjects
LONG-term care insurance -- Law & legislation ,OLDER people ,HEALTH insurance ,INSURANCE law - Abstract
Populations throughout the developed world are dramatically ageing owing to rapid declines in fertility and mortality. Providing long‐term care to the growing numbers of frail elderly people will be a vital public policy challenge in the decades ahead. Japan and Germany are among the few countries that have met this challenge by introducing comprehensive legislation directed at long‐term care. This paper reviews the differences between these Long‐term Care Insurance Laws, with a focus on the availability of a cash allowance for people receiving family‐based care. It reflects on the social, political and economic context of the laws, characterizes each system and points out the inherent difficulties on each side. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Comparative effectiveness of two disparate policies on child health: experimental evidence from the Philippines.
- Author
-
Peabody, John W., Quimbo, Stella, Florentino, Jhiedon, Shimkhada, Riti, Javier, Xylee, Paculdo, David, Jamison, Dean, and Solon, Orville
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S health ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL quality control ,HEALTH insurance ,VALUE-based healthcare ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INSURANCE ,HEALTH insurance & economics ,LABOR incentives ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COST effectiveness ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PAY for performance ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background: Should health systems invest more in access to care by expanding insurance coverage or in health care services including improving the quality of care? Comparing these options experimentally would shed light on the impact and cost-effectiveness of these strategies.Methods: The Quality Improvement Demonstration Study (QIDS) was a randomized policy experiment conducted across 30 districts in the Philippines. The study had a control group and two policy intervention groups intended to improve the health of young children. The demand-side intervention in QIDS was universal health insurance coverage (UHC) for children aged 5 years or younger, and a supply-side intervention, a pay-for-performance (P4P) bonus for all providers who met pre-determined quality levels. In this paper, we compare the impacts of these policies from the QIDS experiment on childhood wasting by calculating DALYs averted per US$spent.Results: The direct per capita costs to implement UHC and P4P are US$4.08 and US$1.98 higher, respectively, compared to control. DALYs due to wasting were reduced by 334,862 in UHC and 1,073,185 in P4P. When adjustments are made for the efficiency of higher quality, the DALYS averted per US$ spent is similar in the two arms, 1.56 and 1.58 for UHC and P4P, respectively. Since the P4P quality improvements touches all patients seen by qualifying providers (32% in UHC versus 100% in P4P), there is a larger reduction in DALYs. With similar programmatic costs for either intervention, in this study, each US$spent under P4P yielded 1.52 DALYs averted compared to the standard program, while UHC yielded only a 0.50 DALY reduction.Conclusion: P4P had a greater impact and was more cost-effective compared to UHC as measured by DALYs averted. While expanded insurance benefit ceilings affected only those who are covered, P4P incentivizes practice quality improvement regardless of whether children are insured or uninsured. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Indonesia's road to universal health coverage: a political journey.
- Author
-
Pisani, Elizabeth, Kok, Maarten Olivier, Nugroho, Kharisma, and Olivier Kok, Maarten
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care ,INDONESIAN politics & government, 1998- ,FINANCIAL crises ,HEALTH insurance policies ,HEALTH insurance & economics ,HEALTH insurance laws ,MEDICAL economics ,MEDICAL policy laws ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
In 2013 Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country, declared that it would provide affordable health care for all its citizens within seven years. This crystallised an ambition first enshrined in law over five decades earlier, but never previously realised. This paper explores Indonesia's journey towards universal health coverage (UHC) from independence to the launch of a comprehensive health insurance scheme in January 2014. We find that Indonesia's path has been determined largely by domestic political concerns – different groups obtained access to healthcare as their socio-political importance grew. A major inflection point occurred following the Asian financial crisis of 1997. To stave off social unrest, the government provided health coverage for the poor for the first time, creating a path dependency that influenced later policy choices. The end of this programme coincided with decentralisation, leading to experimentation with several different models of health provision at the local level. When direct elections for local leaders were introduced in 2005, popular health schemes led to success at the polls. UHC became an electoral asset, moving up the political agenda. It also became contested, with national policy-makers appropriating health insurance programmes that were first developed locally, and taking credit for them. The Indonesian experience underlines the value of policy experimentation, and of a close understanding of the contextual and political factors that drive successful UHC models at the local level. Specific drivers of success and failure should be taken into account when scaling UHC to the national level. In the Indonesian example, UHC became possible when the interests of politically and economically influential groups were either satisfied or neutralised. While technical considerations took a back seat to political priorities in developing the structures for health coverage nationally, they will have to be addressed going forward to achieve sustainable UHC in Indonesia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sub-national health care financing reforms in Indonesia.
- Author
-
Sparrow, Robert, Budiyati, Sri, Yumna, Athia, Warda, Nila, Suryahadi, Asep, and Bedi, Arjun S.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care financing ,HEALTH care reform ,HEALTH insurance ,DECENTRALIZATION of public health administration ,ECONOMIC impact of health care reform ,MEDICAL economics ,NATIONAL health services ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,GOVERNMENT programs ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Copyright of Health Policy & Planning is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Incidence and determinants of hysterectomy in a low-income setting in Gujarat, India.
- Author
-
Desai, Sapna, Campbell, Oona M. R., Sinha, Tara, Mahal, Ajay, Cousens, Simon, and Campbell, Oona Mr
- Subjects
HYSTERECTOMY ,HEALTH insurance ,HEALTH policy ,HEALTH education ,POVERTY & psychology ,HEALTH insurance statistics ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH attitudes ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MENSTRUATION disorders ,TUBAL sterilization ,DISEASE incidence ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Health Policy & Planning is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Opioid and Non-Opioid Pharmacotherapy Use for Pain Management Among Privately Insured Pediatric Patients With Cancer in the United States.
- Author
-
Shen, Chan, Thornton, J Douglas, Li, Ning, Schaefer, Eric, Zhou, Shouhao, Kawasaki, Sarah, Pameijer, Colette, and Leslie, Douglas
- Subjects
LYMPHOMA diagnosis ,LEUKEMIA diagnosis ,ANTICONVULSANTS ,ANTIDEPRESSANTS ,MUSCLE relaxants ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,NONOPIOID analgesics ,NONSTEROIDAL anti-inflammatory agents ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,PEDIATRICS ,CANCER patients ,BONE tumors ,DRUGS ,HEALTH insurance ,RESEARCH funding ,DRUG utilization ,OPIOID analgesics ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,ODDS ratio ,CENTRAL nervous system ,PAIN management ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background This study examined the trends and patterns of opioid and non-opioid pharmacotherapy use among a large national sample of privately insured pediatric patients with cancer in the United States. Materials and Methods We identified pediatric (aged < 21) patients diagnosed with central nervous system (CNS), lymphoma, gonadal, leukemia, or bone cancer from MarketScan data 2005-2019. We examined the proportion of patients who filled a prescription for the following 5 types of pharmacotherapy: opioid, anticonvulsant, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), antidepressant, and muscle relaxant during active cancer treatment. We assessed the trends and patterns in pharmacotherapy using multivariable logistic regressions. Results Among 4174 patients included, 2979 (71%) had an opioid prescription; 746 (18%), 384 (9%), 202 (5%), and 169 (4%) had anticonvulsant, NSAID, antidepressant and muscle relaxant prescriptions, respectively. Multivariable logistic regression showed a nonlinear trend in the use of opioids among pediatric patients with cancer over time such that use slightly increased until 2012 (OR of 1.40 [95% CI, 1.12-1.73] for 2012 vs. 2006) but then decreased thereafter (OR of 0.51 [0.37-0.68] for 2018 vs. 2012). The use of anticonvulsants, NSAIDs, and muscle relaxants increased significantly linearly over time (all P < .005). Conclusion There has been a downward trend in the use of opioids in recent years among pediatric patients with cancer and an upward trend in the use of non-opioid pharmacotherapy for pain management potentially as an alternative to opioids. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Health Citizenship and Access to Health Services: Finland 1900-2000.
- Author
-
Harjula, Minna
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,EUROPEAN Union citizenship ,PUBLIC health ,REFORMS ,EQUALITY & society ,HEALTH insurance ,TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY - Abstract
By analysing access to health services, this paper explores the formation of health citizenship in Finland in the twentieth century. Health citizenship is seen as a part of social citizenship, which emphasises the citizen's rights to social security. The article constructs four different historical layers of health citizenship, each of which emphasise different dimensions of accessibility and involve different inclusive and exclusive tensions. The article shows the change of focus from promoting the acceptability of medical knowledge and health services, to regional availability of the services in the 1920s-1950s, and to universal affordability in the 1960s-1980s. The reforms of the 1990s respond to a new logic of individual responsibility and result in increasing hierarchies of health citizenship. Elements of the previous historical layers still have a presence in the contemporary health care. Finnish development indicates the interconnectedness of civil, political and health citizenship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Exploring health facilities' experiences in implementing the free health-care policy (FHCP) in Nepal: how did organizational factors influence the implementation of the user-fee abolition policy?
- Author
-
Midori Sato, Gilson, Lucy, and Sato, Midori
- Subjects
HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH policy ,PUBLIC health ,ECONOMICS ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH planning ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH insurance ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL personnel ,POLICY sciences ,PRIMARY health care ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Copyright of Health Policy & Planning is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Will China's Cooperative Medical System fail again? Insight from farmer satisfaction survey.
- Author
-
DONG CHEN, KAM KI TANG, LIFENG ZHAO, and YUHONG ZHANG
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,AGRICULTURAL laborers ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,CUSTOMER satisfaction ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This paper studied the sustainability of China's New Rural Cooperative Medical System (NCMS) by evaluating the satisfaction rate of its participants--the farmers. The study related the overall satisfaction of the farmers to their satisfaction with the four different aspects of the program. It also identified which personal and program attributes affect the farmers' satisfaction rate. Survey data of 1278 households from 66 counties in Shandong Province of China were collected in 2011 using a multi-stage stratified cluster-sampling method. To overcome the nepotistic barriers in rural China, field surveys in each township were conducted by university students from the same place. Data were analyzed using multiple regressions and structural equation modeling method. The results showed that 86% of the farmers were either satisfied or very satisfied with the NCMS and 82% indicated their intention to continue participating in the program. Aside from its financial benefits, both the publicity and reimbursement procedure of the program were found to be significant factors in influencing the satisfaction of the farmers. Majority of the participants held positive opinions toward the NCMS, contradicting the negative assessments made by many previous studies. Given the high proportion of farmers willing to continue with the program, it is likely to be sustainable in the near future. Greater publicity and education efforts should be made to make the farmers better informed about the program, and measures should be taken to improve its reimbursement procedure and the setting of the premium level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Affordable Care Act and implications for young adult health.
- Author
-
Monaghan, Maureen
- Abstract
In the USA, young adults are most likely to be uninsured and least likely to report a usual source of medical care than any age group. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) recognizes the critical need for expanded insurance coverage for this age group, and multiple provisions of the ACA address insurance coverage and health care utilization in young adults. This paper presents a brief overview of the challenges of maintaining health insurance coverage and accessing health care in young adults, provisions of the ACA relevant to young adults, and early impact of the ACA on young adult health insurance status and health care access and utilization. We offer policy suggestions for behavioral health providers to address continued challenges related to health care for young adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Reaching out to the surgical community in China.
- Author
-
Lo, C.‐M.
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,CHEMOEMBOLIZATION ,CHIEF executive officers ,HEALTH insurance - Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
48. Problems and the Potential Direction of Reforms for the Current Individual Medical Savings Accounts in the Chinese Health Care System.
- Author
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Kong, Xiangjin, Yang, Yang, Gong, Fuqing, and Zhao, Mingjie
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MEDICAL savings accounts ,HEALTH insurance ,EMPLOYEES ,FAMILIALISM - Abstract
Individual health savings accounts are an important part of the current basic medical insurance system for urban workers in China. Since 1998 when the system of personal medical insurance accounts was first implemented, there has been considerable controversy over its function and significance within different social communities. This paper analyzes the main problems in the practical implementation of individual medical insurance accounts and discusses the social and cultural foundations for the establishment of family health savings accounts from the perspective of Chinese Confucian familism. Accordingly, it addresses the direction of the reform and the development of the current system of individual health insurance accounts in China. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Demand for voluntary basic medical insurance in urban China: panel evidence from the Urban Resident Basic Medical Insurance scheme.
- Author
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Chen, Gang and Yan, Xiao
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,RURAL health ,CITY dwellers ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH education ,HEALTH behavior - Abstract
This paper investigates the key factors associated with the demand for Urban Resident Basic Medical Insurance (URBMI), which was established in 2007 and aims to cover all Chinese urban residents. Two waves of longitudinal household survey data are used, and a three-level random-intercept logit model is used for the analysis. Two different sets of explanatory variables were identified for adults and children, separately. Results suggest for both the adult and the child samples that income, health status, age and health risk behaviours are key influencing factors for basic medical insurance demand. The household head's characteristics are also significantly related to other household members’ medical insurance demands. Specifically, household heads who are more educated or retired are more likely to purchase medical insurance for their children. These findings suggest that an expansion of the special subsidy to the poor or, probably more important, a risk-adjusted benefit package may be needed for voluntary basic medical insurance in China. In addition, adverse selection consistently exists and is a major challenge for the sustainability of medical insurance financing. To expand insurance coverage for children, especially those under school age, special efforts (possibly through health education or health promotion) should be focused on the household head, particularly those engaging in risky health behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Consumers' intention to use generic-drug discount programmes.
- Author
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Patel, Harshali K., Johnson, Michael L., and Sansgiry, Sujit S.
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GENERIC drugs ,PLANNED behavior theory ,DRUG administration ,ETHNICITY ,MEDICATION abuse ,PHARMACY ,HEALTH insurance - Abstract
Objective Generic-drug discount programmes ( GDDPs) offer generic drugs at subsidized costs to both insured and uninsured consumers in the USA. Understanding predictors of intention to use GDDPs could help in developing interventions to direct more consumers to take advantage of such programmes. The objective of this study was to identify predictors of intention to use GDDPs using the theory of planned behaviour ( TPB). Methods A paper-based survey was self-administered to randomly selected individuals from the greater Houston area in Texas, USA. The validated questionnaire included potential predictors of intention to use GDDPs that were derived and measured using the premise of TPB and the concept of awareness. Logistic regression was performed to evaluate if awareness, attitude towards GDDPs and generic drugs, perceived behavioural control ( PBC) and subjective norms predicted intention to use GDDPs after controlling for demographics, income, number of chronic conditions and number of prescription drugs taken. Key findings A response rate of 59.5% was achieved ( n = 663). Approximately 62.4% (414) respondents were aware of and 80% (528) had an intention to use GDDPs. After controlling for demographics and predisposing factors (current prescription drug use, chronic conditions and insurance status), attitude towards GDDPs (odds ratio, OR = 5.08; 95% confidence interval, CI = 3.228-8.003; P < 0.0001), attitude towards generic drugs ( OR = 1.733; CI = 1.231-2.441; P = 0.0016) and PBC ( OR = 1.57; CI = 1.067-2.320; P = 0.0222) significantly predicted intention to use GDDPs. Individuals of Hispanic and African American origin were 3.1 times ( P = 0.0016) and 2.6 times ( P = 0.0173) more likely, respectively, than white people to have an intention to use GDDPs. Conclusions Attitude towards GDDPs and generic drugs, PBC, location and race/ethnicity were significantly associated with intention to use GDDPs. Interventions by stakeholders to promote positive attitudes and highlighting the ease with which GDDPs can be used would be beneficial to eventually increase consumer utilization of GDDPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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