AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examines how subsidizing community-based health insurance (mutuelle) and eliminating co-payments affects healthcare usage in Mayange, Rwanda, highlighting that despite service upgrades, usage rates were stagnant until subsidies were introduced.
  • - After near-100% mutuelle enrollment and the removal of co-payments in early 2007, patient visits to health facilities surged to three times previous levels, indicating that financial barriers significantly affect healthcare access.
  • - The authors suggest that broader implementation of these strategies could lead to higher healthcare utilization and better health outcomes, urging further research to confirm these results on a larger scale for effective health policy development.

Article Abstract

This study investigates the impact of subsidising community-based health insurance (mutuelle) enrolment, removing point-of-service co-payments, and improving service delivery on health facility utilisation rates in Mayange, a sector of rural Rwanda of approximately 25,000 people divided among five 'imidugudu' or small villages. While comprehensive service upgrades were introduced in the Mayange Health Centre between April 2006 and February 2007, utilisation rates remained similar to comparison sites. Between February 2007 and April 2007, subsidies for mutuelle enrolment established virtually 100% coverage. Immediately after co-payments were eliminated in February 2007, patient visits levelled at a rate triple the previous value. Regression analyses using data from Mayange and two comparison sites indicate that removing financial barriers resulted in about 0.6 additional annual visits for curative care per capita. Although based on a single local pilot, these findings suggest that in order to achieve improved health outcomes, key short-term objectives include improved service delivery and reduced financial barriers. Based on this pilot, higher utilisation rates may be affected if broader swaths of the population are enrolled in mutuelle and co-payments are eliminated. Health leaders in Rwanda should consider further studies to determine if the impact of eliminating co-payments and increasing subsidies for mutuelle enrolment as seen in Mayange holds at greater levels of scale. Broader studies to better elucidate the impact of enrolment subsidies and co-payment subsidies on utilisation, health outcomes, and costs would also provide policy insights.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3227794PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2011.593536DOI Listing

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