Multilevel medical insurance mitigate health cost inequality due to air pollution: Evidence from China.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Journal for Equity in Health Pub Date : 2024-08-06 DOI:10.1186/s12939-024-02238-9
Ennan Wang, Minglai Zhu, Yisha Lin, Xiaoyu Xi
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Abstract

Background: Air pollution affects residents' health to varying extents according to differences in socioeconomic status. However, there has been a lack of research on whether air pollution contributes to unfair health costs.

Methods: In this research, data from the China Labour Force Dynamics Survey are matched with data on PM2.5 average concentration and precipitation, and the influence of air pollution on the health expenditures of residents is analysed with econometric methods involving a two-part model, instrument variables and moderating effects.

Results: The findings reveal that air pollution significantly impacts Chinese residents' health costs and leads to low-income people face health inequality. Specifcally, the empirical evidence shows that air pollution has no significant influence on the probability of residents' health costs (β = 0.021, p = 0.770) but that it increases the amount of residents' total outpatient costs (β = 0.379, p < 0.006), reimbursed outpatient cost (β = 0.453, p < 0.044) and out-of-pocket outpatient cost (β = 0.362, p < 0.048). The heterogeneity analysis of income indicates that low-income people face inequality due to health cost inflation caused by air pollution, their total and out-of-pocket outpatient cost significantly increase with PM2.5 (β = 0.417, p = 0.013; β = 0.491, p = 0.020). Further analysis reveals that social basic medical insurance does not have a remarkable positive moderating effect on the influence of air pollution on individual health inflation (β = 0.021, p = 0.292), but supplementary medical insurance for employees could reduce the effect of air pollution on low-income residents' reimbursed and out-of-pocket outpatient cost (β=-1.331, p = 0.096; β=-2.211, p = 0.014).

Conclusion: The study concludes that air pollution increases the amount of Chinese residents' outpatient cost and has no significant effect on the incidence of outpatient cost. However, air pollution has more significant impact on the low-income residents than the high-income residents, which indicates that air pollution leads to the inequity of medical cost. Additionally, the supplementary medical insurance reduces the inequity of medical cost caused by air pollution for the low-income employees.

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多层次医疗保险缓解空气污染造成的医疗费用不平等:来自中国的证据。
背景:空气污染会因社会经济地位的不同而对居民的健康造成不同程度的影响。然而,关于空气污染是否会导致不公平的健康成本的研究却一直缺乏:本研究将中国劳动力动态调查数据与 PM2.5 平均浓度和降水量数据进行比对,并采用计量经济学方法分析了空气污染对居民健康支出的影响,包括两部分模型、工具变量和调节效应:结果:研究结果表明,空气污染严重影响中国居民的健康支出,并导致低收入人群面临健康不平等。具体而言,实证结果表明,空气污染对居民医疗费用发生概率的影响不显著(β=0.021,P=0.770),但增加了居民门诊总费用(β=0.379,P=0.770):研究得出结论:空气污染会增加中国居民的门诊费用,对门诊费用的发生率没有显著影响。但是,空气污染对低收入居民的影响比对高收入居民的影响更大,这说明空气污染导致了医疗费用的不公平。此外,补充医疗保险减少了空气污染对低收入员工造成的医疗费用不公平。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
162
审稿时长
28 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.
期刊最新文献
Layers of inequality: gender, medicalisation and obstetric violence in Ghana. "They pulled that funding away and we're not recovering. it's getting worse": deaths of despair in post-austerity north east England. A hill tribe community advisory board in Northern Thailand: lessons learned one year on. Unpacking occupational and sex divides to understand the moderate progress in life expectancy in recent years (France, 2010's). Correction: Making health inequality analysis accessible: WHO tools and resources using Microsoft Excel.
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