Aims: This chapter evaluates the consumption-stimulation function of social health insurance programs from the perspective of food consumption and diet structure. China’s New Rural Cooperative Medical Scheme (NRCMS), launched in 2003, with data collected in 2000-2006 from a large-scale survey, was used as the focal program in the evaluation study.
Study Design: The study undertakes a retrospective quantitative
evaluation design. Exploiting temporal and spatial variations in the local
implementation of the program, a difference-in-differences model was developed
to estimate the effect of health insurance coverage on the insured’s diet
diversity, overall diet balance, and nutrition intake.
Data: A sample of 2,260 rural Chinese individuals of working age
in the 2000, 2004, and 2006 waves of the China Nutrition and Health Survey
(1989-2015) was used as the estimation sample.
Methodology: Detailed information on survey respondents’
consumption of more than 1,500 food items was used to construct two
diet-structure indicators to serve as the primary outcome variables of our
difference-in-differences analyses: 1) diet-diversity score, a “variety-based”
indicator that counts the number of food groups one consumes out of the set of
foods recommended by the Chinese Nutrition Association; 2) diet-balance index,
a more comprehensive and “balance-based” indicator which takes into account not
only one’s diet diversity but also one’s under- and over-consumption of foods.
Results: NRCMS enrollment significantly increased the insured’s
nutrition intake (carbohydrate intake by 11.3%, protein intake by 8.6-9.3%, fat
intake by 6.6-7.3%), diet diversity (by 0.3 out of 12 recommended food groups),
and overall diet balance (by 2.7 points). Meanwhile, while program enrollment
reduced the incidence of under-consumption of animal products and fruits, it
raised that of over-consumption of grains.
Conclusion: Social health insurance can stimulate the insured’s
food consumption and increase their diet diversity, but it could also impose
health risks by changing their diet structure in undesirable directions. More
research is needed to 1) understand why these undesirable effects occur and 2)
how the program can be modified to avoid these effects.
Author
(s) Details
Qihui Chen
Beijing Food Safety Policy & Strategy Research Base, China Agricultural
University, 100083, P.R. China and College of Economics and Management, China
Agricultural University, Beijing-100083, P.R. China.
Chunchen Pei
College of Economics and Management, China Agricultural University,
Beijing-100083, P.R. China.
Juerong Huang
College of Economics and Management, China Agricultural University,
Beijing-100083, P.R. China.
Guoqiang Tian
College of Economics and Management, China Agricultural University,
Beijing-100083, P.R. China.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/dhrd/v1/3144
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