Hypertension remains the leading risk factor for death and disability in China, and the ability of hypertensive patients to pay for outpatient care and medication has become a critical issue. To report the effect of an outpatient copayment scheme on health outcomes of hypertensive adults in a community-managed population in Xinjiang, we compared changes in outcomes between insured and uninsured groups from baseline to the first follow-up appointment in a community-managed hypertensive population and evaluated these changes based on propensity score matching and the difference-in-difference method. A total of 1,095 individuals in a community-managed hypertension population were selected for investigation at baseline, among which 805 (73.
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