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Willingness to pay for Voluntary Health Insurance in Tanzania

Willingness to pay for Voluntary Health Insurance in Tanzania. August J. Kuwawenaruwa. Background. Increasingly moves are being made to expand health insurance cover in Africa as a means of reducing out of pocket payments as well as improving access to formal health care

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Willingness to pay for Voluntary Health Insurance in Tanzania

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  1. Willingness to pay for Voluntary Health Insurance in Tanzania August J. Kuwawenaruwa

  2. Background • Increasingly moves are being made to expand health insurance cover in Africa as a means of reducing out of pocket payments as well as improving access to formal health care • However, fragmentation of insurance schemes in many settings, along with limited regulation of the health insurance sector, has hampered expansion efforts in many countries.

  3. Challenges • How to expand coverage among the informal sector which constitute a large proportion of the population • How to finance and sustain the expansion of health insurance, and • To what extent mandatory insurance contributions from the formal sector can be used to cross-subsidise contributions from informal sector groups.

  4. Context of Tanzania • Highly fragmented system of health insurance. • National coverage is low around 13% (Humba September, 2010). The aim being to reach 45 % by 2015 (Humba September, 2010) • The National Health Insurance (NHIF) is financed through mandatory payroll contributions amounting to 3% of salaries from the employee which is matched by the employer. • CHF is based on voluntary contribution per annum per household • TIKA recently introduced in urban areas

  5. Benefit Package

  6. Health Insurance Subsidization • There is a huge discrepancy between the benefit package offered to NHIF members compared with CHF members, as well as the amount of revenue generated by each scheme. • While there is cross-subsidization across NHIF members, there is no cross-subsidization across the schemes. Nor is there cross-subsidisation across districts/councils for the CHF.

  7. Objective of the Study • To elicit household’s willingness to join (WTJ) and willingness to pay (WTP) for voluntary health insurance • To assess how WTJ/WTP varies according to benefit package offered, and • To examine households willingness to cross-subsidise poorer groups in the community

  8. Methods • 1,163 uninsured and 1,061 insured household heads were interviewed in 2008 from 3 urban councils and 4 rural districts. • Rural districts were selected such that they had a minimal level of CHF coverage (at least 10%), and to offer some geographical variation. • Uninsured household heads were asked about their WTJ and WTP for health insurance • Scenarios: First reflecting the current design of the CHF with premium Tsh 5,000, the second offering expanded benefits

  9. Eliciting Willingness to Cross-subsidize • Willingness to cross-subsidize questions were addressed to insured household heads. • They were asked: “Would you be willing to contribute to any health insurance scheme or to the council any amount of money so that the very poorest in your community can benefit from free care when they are sick?”. • Those who said “Yes”, were asked to state how much they would be willing to pay per annum to protect the poor

  10. Data Analysis • Bivariate analysis was done to assess the level of association between WTJ, WTP for insurance and willingness to cross-subsidise and a range of individual variables. • Pearson chi-square and t-test test statistics were used for binary explanatory variables and mann-whitney test for continuous explanatory variables to test the significance of the results.

  11. Regression Analysis • A logit model was constructed to assess the determinants of WTJ community health insurance and willingness to cross-subsidize the poor. • An OLS log linear model was constructed to assess the determinants of the amounts people were WTP as well as willing to cross-subsidise. • Examination of theoretical validity was done • It was hypothesized that willingness to pay would be affected by socio-demographic variables

  12. Selected Characteristics of the Households

  13. Willingness to Pay Join • Respondents were more willing to join health insurance in urban than rural areas at the proposed rate of Tsh 5,000 (93% compared to 74%) • Proposed benefit package had a significant effect on people’s willingness to join in rural areas, • 78% were willing to join in Mbulu and Singida districts where inpatient care was covered compared to 72% in Kigoma and Kilosa districts where only primary care was covered

  14. Assessment of the benefit package • Expansion of the benefit package in Kigoma and Kilosa, will increase the probability of joining from 72% to 79%. • In urban areas, the benefit package had little effect on people’s WTJ. • Further, there was very limited willingness to pay more than Tsh 5,000, even with an expanded benefit package

  15. Determinants of WTJ/WTP

  16. Willingness to cross-subsidize • There was a greater willingness to cross-subsidize the poor among rural compared to urban households (46.0% vs 41.2%) • The actual average amounts stated were lower in rural compared to urban areas (mean Tsh 6,620 vs Tsh 13,940). • 39% of NHIF members were willing to cross-subsidize compared to 53% CHF member, • However, NHIF members stated higher average amounts than CHF members (mean Tsh 13,690 vs Tsh 4,790).

  17. Determinants of willingness to cross-subsidise • Results from logit showed that household being male headed it increased the probability of willingness to cross-subsidise by 10.5 percentage points. • Having outpatient visit to formal providers increases the probability of willing to cross-subsidise by 7.4 percentage points. • Richer households, and those working in the formal sector were willing to pay more for the poor and those who had recently sought care were less willing to pay for the poor.

  18. Policy Recommendations • People are willing to join health insurance if they are made aware of the principles of insurance and properly understand the concept of risk pooling. However, willingness to pay remains limited. • The greater willingness to join insurance in urban compared to rural areas suggests that cross subsidisation should also be promoted between urban and rural districts for the CHF. • At present, funds are pooled at the district level, but there is no pooling of funds across districts

  19. Policy Recommendations cont. • NHIF members are willing to cross-subsidise the poor, and would potentially be willing to cross-subsidise CHF • The amounts that could be generated by NHIF members in cross-subsidises would be Tsh 3, 765, 874,000 per annum (=mean amount x 316,460 [NHIF principal members in 2008]). • This means that additional 753,175 CHF members will be enrolled per annum at a premium of Tsh 5,000. • Its equivalent to 11% of the households in Tanzania using 2000 census data. This could have a dramatic effect on national insurance coverage

  20. Conclusion • Households are willing to pay for voluntary health insurance and are willing to cross-subsidise poorer groups within society • In setting the premium policy makers need to consider the variation in the household's socio-economic characteristics. • To achieve the targeted 45% insurance coverage in Tanzania fragmentation of health insurance schemes should be addressed and the size of the risk poor must be maximized. • Maintenance of membership goes parallel with improvement in health care and availability of drugs within the accredited facilities.

  21. Health Insurance for the benefit of all (Financial protection)

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