Supplemental Health Insurance and Equality of Access in Belgium

IF 0.4 Q3 LAW
E. Schokkaert, Tom Van Ourti, D. De Graeve, A. Lecluyse, C. Van de Voorde
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

It has been suggested that the unequal coverage of different socio-economic groups by supplemental insurance could be a partial explanation for the inequality in access to health care in many countries. We analyse the situation in Belgium, a country with a very broad coverage in compulsory social health insurance and where supplemental insurance mainly refers to extra-billing in hospitals. We find that this institutional background is crucial for the explanation of the effects of supplemental insurance. We find no evidence of adverse selection in the coverage of supplemental health insurance, but strong effects of socio-economic background. A count model for hospital care shows that supplemental insurance has no significant effect on the number of spells, but a negative effect on the number of nights. This is in line with patterns of socio-economic stratification that have been well documented for Belgium. It is also in line with the regulation on extra-billing protecting patients in common rooms. For ambulatory care, we find a positive effect of supplemental insurance on visits to a dentist and on number of spells at a day centre but no effect on visits to a GP, on drugs consumption and on visits to a specialist.
比利时的补充健康保险和平等获取
有人认为,补充保险对不同社会经济群体的不平等覆盖可能是许多国家在获得保健方面不平等的部分解释。我们分析了比利时的情况,这是一个强制性社会健康保险覆盖面非常广的国家,补充保险主要指的是医院的额外收费。我们发现,这一制度背景对于解释补充保险的影响至关重要。我们没有发现补充健康保险覆盖范围存在逆向选择的证据,但社会经济背景有很强的影响。医院护理的计数模型显示,补充保险对住院天数没有显著影响,但对住院天数有负向影响。这符合比利时有充分记录的社会经济分层模式。这也符合保护普通病房患者的额外收费规定。对于门诊护理,我们发现补充保险对去看牙医和日托中心的次数有积极影响,但对去看全科医生、药物消耗和去看专家没有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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