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Published in: International Journal of Health Economics and Management 3-4/2019

01-12-2019 | Research article

Attitudes to reform: Could a cooperative health insurance scheme work in Russia?

Authors: Maria Kaneva, Christopher J. Gerry, Nikolay Avxentiev, Valerii Baidin

Published in: International Journal of Health Economics and Management | Issue 3-4/2019

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Abstract

As for all health systems, in Russia, the demand for medical care is greater than its health system is able to guarantee the supply of. In this context, removing services from the state guaranteed package is an option that is receiving serious consideration. In this paper, we examine the attitudes of the Russian population to such a reform. Exploiting a widely-used methodology, we explore the population’s willingness to pay for cooperative health insurance. Distinguishing between socioeconomic and demographic factors, health-related indicators and risk aversion we find, consistent with other literature, positive income and risk aversion effects. We interpret the former as evidence that the Russian population is not opposed to the idea of progressive redistribution, to pool the costs of health-related risks; and the latter as evidence that risk-averse individuals demand more insurance coverage. In exploring these results further, we show that cognitive bias is important: overestimating the benefits leads to the purchase of additional insurance, while underestimating lowers demand for insurance. Our overall conclusion is that the introduction of a supplementary cooperative health insurance scheme in Russia could increase the accessibility of healthcare, lower the tendency for informal payments, incentivize the personal maintenance of good health and create a new source of funding for public healthcare.
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
The survey was sponsored by the UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies (UCL SSEES). The authors were directly involved in helping to formulate the attitudinal instruments within the survey.
 
2
The statistical error of the survey does not exceed 3.4%.
 
3
It is worth noting that, in Russia, all VHI plans are similar. Basically, under VHI, all services in clinics and hospitals that work with a particular insurance company are available for a policy holder except dental care and treatment of self-inflicted injuries. If/once the cost of services exceeds the level of insurance coverage during a year, the insurance is terminated. Since all VHI plans are very similar, the situation when the choice of services included in the cooperative health insurance influences a person’s choice of policy is very unlikely.
 
4
The fact that individuals might have different perceptions of quality is not of primary importance here since his/her unique perception is one of the subjective factors on which an individual bases his/her WTP.
 
5
A subsequent question (5D) asked respondents to provide an estimation of a lower price of insurance at which they would question the quality of services provided.
 
6
In our regressions, this sample is reduced further due to missing information for illness (N = 299) and the information required to calculate the Arrow–Pratt measures (N = 261).
 
7
Results are available from the authors upon request.
 
8
Respondents were asked to choose between six responses reflecting their subjective income status.
 
9
Choice of cooperative health insurance could in practice be influenced by having/not having voluntary health insurance (VHI). Question 7 asked about reasons for not being willing to participate in the cooperative health insurance scheme. It was an open-ended question and only 5 out of 326 individuals with VHI (1.5%) stated that VHI was a reason for not wanting to participate in the new proposed scheme. Given such a low proportion (1.5%) we did not specifically control for VHI as a possible factor influencing choice of the new scheme.
 
10
The ‘cannot answer’ choice in Q5A is coded as missing and the ‘over 9000’ (13 observations) choice is changed to the arbitrary selected figure of 10,000 in order to substitute a qualitative answer with a numeric value.
 
11
To preserve space we only assess the impact of cognitive bias on the multinomial regression (from Table 2) but the results (available on request) based on the other two specifications are not qualitatively affected.
 
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Metadata
Title
Attitudes to reform: Could a cooperative health insurance scheme work in Russia?
Authors
Maria Kaneva
Christopher J. Gerry
Nikolay Avxentiev
Valerii Baidin
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
International Journal of Health Economics and Management / Issue 3-4/2019
Print ISSN: 2199-9023
Electronic ISSN: 2199-9031
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10754-019-09260-3

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