Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova

BACKGROUND In 2004, the Moldovan government introduced mandatory (social) health insurance (MHI) with the goals of sustainable health financing and improved access to services for poorer sections of the population. The government pays contributions for non-employed groups but the self-employed, which in Moldova include many agricultural workers, must purchase their own cover. This paper describes the extent to which the Moldovan MHI scheme has managed to achieve coverage of its population and the characteristics of those who remain without cover. METHODS The 2008 July-October enhanced health module of the Moldovan Household Budget Survey was used. The survey uses multi-stage random sampling, identifying individuals within households within 150 primary sampling units. Numbers and characteristics of those without insurance were tabulated and the determinants of lack of cover were assessed using multivariate regression. RESULTS 3760 respondents were interviewed. Seventy-eight per cent were covered by MHI. Factors associated with being uninsured include being self-employed (particularly in agriculture), unemployed, younger age and low income. Respondents who were self-employed in agriculture were over 27 times more likely to be uninsured than those who were employed. Agricultural workers in Moldova are responsible for purchasing their own cover; most respondents cited cost as the main reason for not doing so. CONCLUSION While being uninsured has an impact on utilization, financial barriers persist for those with insurance who seek care. The strengths and weaknesses of the MHI system in Moldova provide valuable lessons for policy makers in low- and middle-income countries addressing the challenges of achieving equitable coverage in health insurance schemes and the complex nature of financial barriers to access.

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Main Authors: Richardson, E., Roberts, B., Sava, V., Menon, R., McKee, M.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:EN
Published: 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5130
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spelling dig-okr-1098651302021-04-23T14:02:21Z Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova Richardson, E. Roberts, B. Sava, V. Menon, R. McKee, M. BACKGROUND In 2004, the Moldovan government introduced mandatory (social) health insurance (MHI) with the goals of sustainable health financing and improved access to services for poorer sections of the population. The government pays contributions for non-employed groups but the self-employed, which in Moldova include many agricultural workers, must purchase their own cover. This paper describes the extent to which the Moldovan MHI scheme has managed to achieve coverage of its population and the characteristics of those who remain without cover. METHODS The 2008 July-October enhanced health module of the Moldovan Household Budget Survey was used. The survey uses multi-stage random sampling, identifying individuals within households within 150 primary sampling units. Numbers and characteristics of those without insurance were tabulated and the determinants of lack of cover were assessed using multivariate regression. RESULTS 3760 respondents were interviewed. Seventy-eight per cent were covered by MHI. Factors associated with being uninsured include being self-employed (particularly in agriculture), unemployed, younger age and low income. Respondents who were self-employed in agriculture were over 27 times more likely to be uninsured than those who were employed. Agricultural workers in Moldova are responsible for purchasing their own cover; most respondents cited cost as the main reason for not doing so. CONCLUSION While being uninsured has an impact on utilization, financial barriers persist for those with insurance who seek care. The strengths and weaknesses of the MHI system in Moldova provide valuable lessons for policy makers in low- and middle-income countries addressing the challenges of achieving equitable coverage in health insurance schemes and the complex nature of financial barriers to access. 2012-03-30T07:31:27Z 2012-03-30T07:31:27Z 2011 Journal Article Health Policy Plan 1460-2237 (Electronic) 0268-1080 (Linking) http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5130 EN http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Journal Article Moldova
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
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region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language EN
description BACKGROUND In 2004, the Moldovan government introduced mandatory (social) health insurance (MHI) with the goals of sustainable health financing and improved access to services for poorer sections of the population. The government pays contributions for non-employed groups but the self-employed, which in Moldova include many agricultural workers, must purchase their own cover. This paper describes the extent to which the Moldovan MHI scheme has managed to achieve coverage of its population and the characteristics of those who remain without cover. METHODS The 2008 July-October enhanced health module of the Moldovan Household Budget Survey was used. The survey uses multi-stage random sampling, identifying individuals within households within 150 primary sampling units. Numbers and characteristics of those without insurance were tabulated and the determinants of lack of cover were assessed using multivariate regression. RESULTS 3760 respondents were interviewed. Seventy-eight per cent were covered by MHI. Factors associated with being uninsured include being self-employed (particularly in agriculture), unemployed, younger age and low income. Respondents who were self-employed in agriculture were over 27 times more likely to be uninsured than those who were employed. Agricultural workers in Moldova are responsible for purchasing their own cover; most respondents cited cost as the main reason for not doing so. CONCLUSION While being uninsured has an impact on utilization, financial barriers persist for those with insurance who seek care. The strengths and weaknesses of the MHI system in Moldova provide valuable lessons for policy makers in low- and middle-income countries addressing the challenges of achieving equitable coverage in health insurance schemes and the complex nature of financial barriers to access.
format Journal Article
author Richardson, E.
Roberts, B.
Sava, V.
Menon, R.
McKee, M.
spellingShingle Richardson, E.
Roberts, B.
Sava, V.
Menon, R.
McKee, M.
Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova
author_facet Richardson, E.
Roberts, B.
Sava, V.
Menon, R.
McKee, M.
author_sort Richardson, E.
title Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova
title_short Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova
title_full Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova
title_fullStr Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova
title_full_unstemmed Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Access in Moldova
title_sort health insurance coverage and health care access in moldova
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/5130
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