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Does migration limit the effect of health insurance on hypertension management in China?

  • Hai Fang
  • , Yinzi Jin
  • , Miaomiao Zhao
  • , Huyang Zhang
  • , Johna Rizzo
  • , Donglan Zhang
  • , Zhiyuan Hou

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: In China, rapid urbanization has caused migration from rural to urban areas, and raised the prevalence of hypertension. However, public health insurance is not portable from one place to another, and migration may limit the effectiveness of this non-portable health insurance on healthcare. Our study aims to investigate whether migration limits the effectiveness of health insurance on hypertension management in China. Methods: Data were obtained from the national baseline survey of the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study in 2011, including 4926 hypertensive respondents with public health insurance. Outcome measures included use of primary care, hypertension awareness, medication use, blood pressure monitoring, physician advice, and blood pressure control. Multivariate logistic regressions were estimated to examine whether the effects of rural health insurance on hypertension management differed between those who migrated to urban areas and those who did not migrate and lived in rural areas. Results: Among hypertensive respondents, 60.7% were aware of their hypertensive status. Compared to rural residents, the non-portable feature of rural health insurance significantly reduced rural-to-urban migrants’ probabilities of using primary care by 7.8 percentage points, hypertension awareness by 8.8 percentage points, and receiving physician advice by 18.3 percentage points. Conclusions: In China, migration to urban areas limited the effectiveness of rural health insurance on hypertension management due to its non-portable nature. It is critical to improve the portability of rural health insurance, and to extend urban health insurance and primary care coverage to rural-to-urban migrants to achieve better chronic disease management.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1256
JournalInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Volume14
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 20 2017

Keywords

  • Awareness
  • China
  • Disease control
  • Health insurance
  • Hypertension
  • Migration

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