The first private sector health insurance company in Ghana

Int J Health Plann Manage. 1998 Apr-Jun;13(2):165-75. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1099-1751(199804/06)13:2<165::AID-HPM505>3.0.CO;2-X.

Abstract

This article analyses the development of Ghana's first private sector health insurance company, the Nationwide Medical Insurance Company. Taking both policy and practical considerations into account (stakeholders' perspectives, economic viability, equity and efficiency), it is structured around key questions which help to define the position and roles of stakeholders--the insurance agency itself, contributors, beneficiaries, and providers--and how they relate to one another and the insurance scheme. These relationships will to a large extent determine Nationwide's long-term success or failure. By creating a unique alliance between physician providers and private sector companies, Nationwide has used employers' interest in cost containment and physicians' interest in expanding their client base as an entrée into the virgin territory of health insurance, and created a hybrid variety of private sector insurance with some of the attributes of a health maintenance organization or managed care. The case study is unusual in that, while public sector programs are often open to academic scrutiny, researchers have rarely had access to detailed data on the establishment of a single private sector insurance company in a developing country. Given that Ghana is planning to launch a national health insurance plan, the article concludes by considering what the experience of this private sector initiative might have to offer public sector planners.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Cost Control
  • Developing Countries
  • Efficiency, Organizational
  • Financial Management
  • Ghana
  • Health Benefit Plans, Employee*
  • Insurance Carriers*
  • Insurance Coverage
  • Investments
  • National Health Programs
  • Private Sector / economics*
  • Reimbursement Mechanisms
  • Social Justice