Do subsidized health programs in Armenia increase utilization among the poor?

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Policy Research Working Paper, no. 4017Publication details: Washington, D C World Bank 2006Description: 22 pSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • 362.1 A6D6
Summary: This article analyzes the extent to which the Basic Benefit Package (BBP), a subsidized health program in Armenia, increases utilization and affordability of outpatient health care among the poor. The authors find that beneficiaries of the BBP pay approximately 45 percent less in fees for doctor visits (and display 36 percent higher outpatient utilization rates) than eligible users not receiving the BBP. However, even among BBP beneficiaries the level of outpatient health care utilization remains low. This occurs because the program mainly provides discounted fees for doctor visits, but fees do not constitute the main financial constraint for users. The authors estimate suggest that other non-fee expenditures, such as prescription medicines, constitute a more significant financial constraint and are not subsidized by the BBP. As a result, outpatient health care remains expensive even for BBP beneficiaries. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/187811468221358818/Do-subsidized-health-programs-in-Armenia-increase-utilization-among-the-poor
List(s) this item appears in: World Bank Working Paper Series
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This article analyzes the extent to which the Basic Benefit Package (BBP), a subsidized health program in Armenia, increases utilization and affordability of outpatient health care among the poor. The authors find that beneficiaries of the BBP pay approximately 45 percent less in fees for doctor visits (and display 36 percent higher outpatient utilization rates) than eligible users not receiving the BBP. However, even among BBP beneficiaries the level of outpatient health care utilization remains low. This occurs because the program mainly provides discounted fees for doctor visits, but fees do not constitute the main financial constraint for users. The authors estimate suggest that other non-fee expenditures, such as prescription medicines, constitute a more significant financial constraint and are not subsidized by the BBP. As a result, outpatient health care remains expensive even for BBP beneficiaries.

http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/187811468221358818/Do-subsidized-health-programs-in-Armenia-increase-utilization-among-the-poor

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