Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China

The literature contains few impact evaluations of health sector reforms, especially those involving broad and simultaneous changes on both the demand and supply sides of the sector. This paper reports the results of a World Bank-funded health sector reform project in China known as Health VIII. On the supply-side, the project combined infrastructure investments (especially at the township level) with improved planning and management, including a referral system between township health centers and county hospitals, and interventions aimed at improving the effectiveness and quality of care, including the introduction of clinical protocols and essential drug lists. On the demand-side, the project sought to resurrect community health insurance, and to introduce a safety net for the very poor to provide them with financial assistance with their health care expenses. The evaluation reported here concerns just one of the project's seven provinces, namely Gansu, the reason being that no suitable data are available to undertake a rigorous evaluation in all provinces. This paper makes use of a panel dataset collected for quite another purpose but whose timing (just around the time the project started and four years later) and location (covering both project and non-project counties) makes it well-suited to the task. The paper compares estimates obtained using a variety of different estimators, including naïve single differences (before and after, and with and without the project), and differences-in-differences, adjusting for heterogeneity through both regression and matching methods. The results suggest that it makes a difference to the estimated impact of Health VIII which estimator is used, with the naïve single differences producing often markedly different estimates from the preferred approach of combining difference-in-differences with matching. The results further suggest that Health VIII has been mostly successful in its goals. The preferred estimator suggests that the project reduced illness among children, improved self-assessed health, and increased doctor visits among the population in general, and reduced the incidence of catastrophic health spending, defined as annual spending in excess of 10 percent of annual per capita income. But the project appears to have increased the development and use of high-level facilities, hastened the demise of the village clinic, and may have reduced immunization rates.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yu, Shengchao, Wagstaff, Adam
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-10
Subjects:ASTHMA, CANCER, CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING, CLINICS, COMMUNITY HEALTH, DEATHS, DEWORMING, DIABETES, DIAGNOSIS, DISEASE CONTROL, DOCTORS, DRUGS, EMPLOYMENT, FAMILIES, FINANCIAL PROTECTION, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH CENTERS, HEALTH DATA, HEALTH INSURANCE, HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM, HEALTH INTERVENTIONS, HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS, HEALTH OUTCOMES, HEALTH PROJECTS, HEALTH REFORM, HEALTH SECTOR, HEALTH SECTOR REFORM, HEALTH SERVICE, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH STATUS, HEALTH SYSTEM, HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE, HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM, HEALTH SYSTEMS, HOSPITAL BEDS, HOSPITALS, HOUSEHOLDS, IMMUNIZATION, INPATIENT CARE, INSURANCE COVERAGE, INTERVENTION, MEDICAL CARE, MEDICAL EXPENSES, MEDICINES, MENTAL ILLNESS, MORTALITY, NURSES, NUTRITION, OUTPATIENT CARE, PHARMACY, POLICY RESEARCH, PRIVATE INSURANCE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PROBABILITY, PUBLIC HEALTH, QUALITY OF CARE, SAFETY, SCHOOL HEALTH, SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE, SOCIAL WELFARE, VACCINATIONS, VILLAGES, VISITS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/10/6323675/health-sector-reforms-intended-impacts-world-banks-health-viii-project-gansu-province-china
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8515
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spelling dig-okr-1098685152024-08-08T17:18:50Z Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China Yu, Shengchao Wagstaff, Adam ASTHMA CANCER CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING CLINICS COMMUNITY HEALTH DEATHS DEWORMING DIABETES DIAGNOSIS DISEASE CONTROL DOCTORS DRUGS EMPLOYMENT FAMILIES FINANCIAL PROTECTION HEALTH CARE HEALTH CENTERS HEALTH DATA HEALTH INSURANCE HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM HEALTH INTERVENTIONS HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH PROJECTS HEALTH REFORM HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SECTOR REFORM HEALTH SERVICE HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HEALTH SYSTEM HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM HEALTH SYSTEMS HOSPITAL BEDS HOSPITALS HOUSEHOLDS IMMUNIZATION INPATIENT CARE INSURANCE COVERAGE INTERVENTION MEDICAL CARE MEDICAL EXPENSES MEDICINES MENTAL ILLNESS MORTALITY NURSES NUTRITION OUTPATIENT CARE PHARMACY POLICY RESEARCH PRIVATE INSURANCE PRIVATE SECTOR PROBABILITY PUBLIC HEALTH QUALITY OF CARE SAFETY SCHOOL HEALTH SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE SOCIAL WELFARE VACCINATIONS VILLAGES VISITS The literature contains few impact evaluations of health sector reforms, especially those involving broad and simultaneous changes on both the demand and supply sides of the sector. This paper reports the results of a World Bank-funded health sector reform project in China known as Health VIII. On the supply-side, the project combined infrastructure investments (especially at the township level) with improved planning and management, including a referral system between township health centers and county hospitals, and interventions aimed at improving the effectiveness and quality of care, including the introduction of clinical protocols and essential drug lists. On the demand-side, the project sought to resurrect community health insurance, and to introduce a safety net for the very poor to provide them with financial assistance with their health care expenses. The evaluation reported here concerns just one of the project's seven provinces, namely Gansu, the reason being that no suitable data are available to undertake a rigorous evaluation in all provinces. This paper makes use of a panel dataset collected for quite another purpose but whose timing (just around the time the project started and four years later) and location (covering both project and non-project counties) makes it well-suited to the task. The paper compares estimates obtained using a variety of different estimators, including naïve single differences (before and after, and with and without the project), and differences-in-differences, adjusting for heterogeneity through both regression and matching methods. The results suggest that it makes a difference to the estimated impact of Health VIII which estimator is used, with the naïve single differences producing often markedly different estimates from the preferred approach of combining difference-in-differences with matching. The results further suggest that Health VIII has been mostly successful in its goals. The preferred estimator suggests that the project reduced illness among children, improved self-assessed health, and increased doctor visits among the population in general, and reduced the incidence of catastrophic health spending, defined as annual spending in excess of 10 percent of annual per capita income. But the project appears to have increased the development and use of high-level facilities, hastened the demise of the village clinic, and may have reduced immunization rates. 2012-06-20T15:03:58Z 2012-06-20T15:03:58Z 2005-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/10/6323675/health-sector-reforms-intended-impacts-world-banks-health-viii-project-gansu-province-china https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8515 English Policy Research Working Paper; No. 3743 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic ASTHMA
CANCER
CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING
CLINICS
COMMUNITY HEALTH
DEATHS
DEWORMING
DIABETES
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE CONTROL
DOCTORS
DRUGS
EMPLOYMENT
FAMILIES
FINANCIAL PROTECTION
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CENTERS
HEALTH DATA
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH PROJECTS
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SERVICE
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HOSPITAL BEDS
HOSPITALS
HOUSEHOLDS
IMMUNIZATION
INPATIENT CARE
INSURANCE COVERAGE
INTERVENTION
MEDICAL CARE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MEDICINES
MENTAL ILLNESS
MORTALITY
NURSES
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACY
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROBABILITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
QUALITY OF CARE
SAFETY
SCHOOL HEALTH
SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
VACCINATIONS
VILLAGES
VISITS
ASTHMA
CANCER
CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING
CLINICS
COMMUNITY HEALTH
DEATHS
DEWORMING
DIABETES
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE CONTROL
DOCTORS
DRUGS
EMPLOYMENT
FAMILIES
FINANCIAL PROTECTION
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CENTERS
HEALTH DATA
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH PROJECTS
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SERVICE
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HOSPITAL BEDS
HOSPITALS
HOUSEHOLDS
IMMUNIZATION
INPATIENT CARE
INSURANCE COVERAGE
INTERVENTION
MEDICAL CARE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MEDICINES
MENTAL ILLNESS
MORTALITY
NURSES
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACY
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROBABILITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
QUALITY OF CARE
SAFETY
SCHOOL HEALTH
SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
VACCINATIONS
VILLAGES
VISITS
spellingShingle ASTHMA
CANCER
CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING
CLINICS
COMMUNITY HEALTH
DEATHS
DEWORMING
DIABETES
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE CONTROL
DOCTORS
DRUGS
EMPLOYMENT
FAMILIES
FINANCIAL PROTECTION
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CENTERS
HEALTH DATA
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH PROJECTS
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SERVICE
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HOSPITAL BEDS
HOSPITALS
HOUSEHOLDS
IMMUNIZATION
INPATIENT CARE
INSURANCE COVERAGE
INTERVENTION
MEDICAL CARE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MEDICINES
MENTAL ILLNESS
MORTALITY
NURSES
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACY
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROBABILITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
QUALITY OF CARE
SAFETY
SCHOOL HEALTH
SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
VACCINATIONS
VILLAGES
VISITS
ASTHMA
CANCER
CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING
CLINICS
COMMUNITY HEALTH
DEATHS
DEWORMING
DIABETES
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE CONTROL
DOCTORS
DRUGS
EMPLOYMENT
FAMILIES
FINANCIAL PROTECTION
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CENTERS
HEALTH DATA
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH PROJECTS
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SERVICE
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HOSPITAL BEDS
HOSPITALS
HOUSEHOLDS
IMMUNIZATION
INPATIENT CARE
INSURANCE COVERAGE
INTERVENTION
MEDICAL CARE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MEDICINES
MENTAL ILLNESS
MORTALITY
NURSES
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACY
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROBABILITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
QUALITY OF CARE
SAFETY
SCHOOL HEALTH
SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
VACCINATIONS
VILLAGES
VISITS
Yu, Shengchao
Wagstaff, Adam
Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China
description The literature contains few impact evaluations of health sector reforms, especially those involving broad and simultaneous changes on both the demand and supply sides of the sector. This paper reports the results of a World Bank-funded health sector reform project in China known as Health VIII. On the supply-side, the project combined infrastructure investments (especially at the township level) with improved planning and management, including a referral system between township health centers and county hospitals, and interventions aimed at improving the effectiveness and quality of care, including the introduction of clinical protocols and essential drug lists. On the demand-side, the project sought to resurrect community health insurance, and to introduce a safety net for the very poor to provide them with financial assistance with their health care expenses. The evaluation reported here concerns just one of the project's seven provinces, namely Gansu, the reason being that no suitable data are available to undertake a rigorous evaluation in all provinces. This paper makes use of a panel dataset collected for quite another purpose but whose timing (just around the time the project started and four years later) and location (covering both project and non-project counties) makes it well-suited to the task. The paper compares estimates obtained using a variety of different estimators, including naïve single differences (before and after, and with and without the project), and differences-in-differences, adjusting for heterogeneity through both regression and matching methods. The results suggest that it makes a difference to the estimated impact of Health VIII which estimator is used, with the naïve single differences producing often markedly different estimates from the preferred approach of combining difference-in-differences with matching. The results further suggest that Health VIII has been mostly successful in its goals. The preferred estimator suggests that the project reduced illness among children, improved self-assessed health, and increased doctor visits among the population in general, and reduced the incidence of catastrophic health spending, defined as annual spending in excess of 10 percent of annual per capita income. But the project appears to have increased the development and use of high-level facilities, hastened the demise of the village clinic, and may have reduced immunization rates.
topic_facet ASTHMA
CANCER
CATASTROPHIC HEALTH SPENDING
CLINICS
COMMUNITY HEALTH
DEATHS
DEWORMING
DIABETES
DIAGNOSIS
DISEASE CONTROL
DOCTORS
DRUGS
EMPLOYMENT
FAMILIES
FINANCIAL PROTECTION
HEALTH CARE
HEALTH CENTERS
HEALTH DATA
HEALTH INSURANCE
HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM
HEALTH INTERVENTIONS
HEALTH OUTCOME INDICATORS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HEALTH PROJECTS
HEALTH REFORM
HEALTH SECTOR
HEALTH SECTOR REFORM
HEALTH SERVICE
HEALTH SERVICES
HEALTH STATUS
HEALTH SYSTEM
HEALTH SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
HEALTH SYSTEM REFORM
HEALTH SYSTEMS
HOSPITAL BEDS
HOSPITALS
HOUSEHOLDS
IMMUNIZATION
INPATIENT CARE
INSURANCE COVERAGE
INTERVENTION
MEDICAL CARE
MEDICAL EXPENSES
MEDICINES
MENTAL ILLNESS
MORTALITY
NURSES
NUTRITION
OUTPATIENT CARE
PHARMACY
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE INSURANCE
PRIVATE SECTOR
PROBABILITY
PUBLIC HEALTH
QUALITY OF CARE
SAFETY
SCHOOL HEALTH
SOCIAL HEALTH INSURANCE
SOCIAL WELFARE
VACCINATIONS
VILLAGES
VISITS
author Yu, Shengchao
Wagstaff, Adam
author_facet Yu, Shengchao
Wagstaff, Adam
author_sort Yu, Shengchao
title Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China
title_short Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China
title_full Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China
title_fullStr Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China
title_full_unstemmed Do Health Sector Reforms Have Their Intended Impacts? The World Bank’s Health VIII Project in Gansu Province, China
title_sort do health sector reforms have their intended impacts? the world bank’s health viii project in gansu province, china
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2005-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/10/6323675/health-sector-reforms-intended-impacts-world-banks-health-viii-project-gansu-province-china
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8515
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