Abstract
AbstractThe world is ageing with unprecedented momentum, and large global south nations are ageing at higher speed than their northern peers. They have grown old while they have not grown rich, straining their health systems’ ability to deliver financial protection. This work aimed to assess whether Indonesia’s health insurance scheme, seven years on, has delivered equal protection for families with older members (over 60 years) as for other families.MethodsBefore-and-after observation study is designed to estimate how much difference the Scheme made to probabilities of catastrophic payment and financial impoverishment for the two family types. As in recent assessments, two national socioeconomic surveys were used (2013, 2021). Two level observations came from 622,125 families residing in 514 districts across the archipelago. Financial protection indicators against catastrophic payment and impoverishment were constructed following recent works. I estimated two level probit models, then plotted marginal probabilities of financial protection. A sensitivity analysis was conducted with the standard financial protection indicator.FindingAfter the Scheme, financial hardship for all family types has reduced by 19%. But families with older members (compared to other families) have an additional 0.7% risk of incurring catastrophic payment or financial impoverishment. And social and spatial inequalities in health persist.DiscussionWhile the Scheme has markedly improved financial protection for all, families with older members remain at higher risk of being unprotected. The global south can prepare for an ageing world by monitoring financial protection and its social determinants and systematically distinguishing families with older members.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference39 articles.
1. Britnell, M . In Search of the Perfect Health System. (Palgrave, 2015).
2. Is Indonesia achieving universal health coverage? Secondary analysis of national data on insurance coverage, health spending and service availability
3. Kwon, S. , Meng, Q.-Y. , Tangcharoensathien, V. , Limwattananon, S. & James, C. D. Direct household payments for health services in Asia and the Pacific. (WHO Asia Pacific Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, 2012).
4. The benefits and burden of health financing in Indonesia: analyses of nationally representative cross-sectional data;The Lancet Global Health,2023
5. Cheng, Q. et al. Equity of health financing in Indonesia: A 5-year financing incidence analysis (2015–2019). The Lancet Regional Health – Western Pacific 21, (2022).