How public health insurance expansion affects healthcare utilizations in middle and low-income households: an observational study from national cross-section surveys in Vietnam

BMC Public Health. 2023 Mar 31;23(1):624. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15500-6.

Abstract

Public health insurance (PHI) has been implemented with different levels of participation in many countries, from voluntary to mandatory. In Vietnam, a law amendment made PHI compulsory nationwide in 2015 with a tolerance phase allowing people a flexible time to enroll. This study aims to examine mechanisms under which the amendment affected the enrollment, healthcare utilization, and out-of-pocket (OOP) expenditures by middle- and low-income households in this transitioning process.Using the biennial Vietnam Household Living Standard Surveys, the study applied the doubly robust difference-in-differences approach to compare outcomes in the post-amendment period from the 2016 survey with those in the pre-amendment period from the 2014 survey. The approach inheriting advantages from its predecessors, i.e., the difference-in-differences and the augmented inverse-probability weighting methods, can mitigate possible biases in policy evaluations due to the changes within the group and between groups over time in the cross-section observational study.The results showed health insurance expansion with extensive subsidies in premiums and medical coverage for persons other than the full-time employed, young children or elderly members in the family, significantly increased enrollments in the middle- and low-income groups by 9% and 8%, respectively. The number of visits for PHI-eligible services also increased, approximately 0.5 more visit per person in the middle-income and 1 more visit per person in the low-income. The amendment, however, so far did not show any significant effect on reducing OOP payments, neither for the low nor the middle-income groups. To further expand PHI coverage and financial protections, policymakers should focus on improving public health facilities, contracting PHI to more accredited private health providers, and motivating the high-income group's enrollments.

Keywords: Doubly-robust difference-in-differences; Low-income; Middle-income; Public health insurance expansion; Vietnam.

Publication types

  • Observational Study
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Child
  • Child, Preschool
  • Family Characteristics
  • Health Expenditures
  • Humans
  • Insurance, Health*
  • Patient Acceptance of Health Care
  • Poverty*
  • Vietnam