Determinants Of Willingness to Pay for Health Insurance Among Commercial Motorcyclists in Kampala City, Uganda: A Contingency Valuation Method
Authors
Abstract:
Background: To assess determinants of willingness to pay for community health insurance among commercial motorcyclists (Boda Boda riders) in Kampala City. Methods: A descriptive cross sectional research was done. A sample of commercial motorcyclists’ stages were purposively selected. Simple random sampling was used to select respondents at each stage. Structured interviews and contingency valuation methods were used for data collection and to measure willingness to pay (WTP) for health insurance from 381 respondents. The estimated total number of commercial motorcyclists in Nakawa Division is 50,000. The interviews were administered for an average of 30minutes. Data were collected in April, May and June 2019. SPSS V21 was used for analysis. Data were analyzed by multivariate regression at a significance level of P<0.05. Result: Seventy percent of the respondent Boda Boda riders were WTP for health insurance. The motorcyclists who had spent at least five years in the trade were 9 times more willing to pay for insurance. Respondents with hired motorcycles and had ever been involved in a motor accident were less likely to be willing to pay for insurance. The other key determinants of willingness to pay included: experience of being a commercial motorcyclist for 3 or more years, sensitization about health insurance, self-employment (rides his own a Boda Boda), prior involvement in a motorcycle accident, having paid for any form of insurance and being single. Conclusion: The WTP is high; 7 out of every 10 commercial motorcyclists were willing to pay a premium of at least UGX. 70,000 (USD 20). The WTP among these cyclists is determined by individual characteristics and to a less extent, by health insurance scheme characteristics. This study will inform the enrolment of the informal sector into health insurance schemes with the aim of increasing universal coverage in Uganda and other similar settings.
similar resources
Assessment of willingness to pay for improved air quality using contingent valuation method
Rapid urbanization and severe air quality deterioration in Pakistan have increased citizens’s concern towards air pollution. This study, conducted in November, 2016, aimed to develop relationship between degraded air quality and resident’s willingness to pay for improved air quality in city of Lahore, Pakistan through contingent valuation method to quantify an individual’s willingness to pay fo...
full textAwareness and Willingness to Pay for Community Based Health Insurance Scheme in North-Western Nigeria
There is a need for the communities to develop their health financing system, most especially those that were not covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). This will give the people an opportunity to finance their medical care which in turn would alleviate financial burden at the point of treatment. Therefore, this study is aimed to determine the level of awareness for Community B...
full textWillingness to pay for social health insurance among informal sector workers in Wuhan, China: a contingent valuation study
BACKGROUND Most of the about 140 million informal sector workers in urban China do not have health insurance. A 1998 central government policy leaves it to the discretion of municipal governments to offer informal sector workers in cities voluntary participation in a social health insurance for formal sector workers, the so-called 'basic health insurance' (BHI). METHODS We used the contingent...
full textWillingness to pay for National Health Insurance Fund among public servants in Juba City, South Sudan: a contingent evaluation
BACKGROUND This study assessed willingness to pay for National Health Insurance Fund (NHIF) among public servants in Juba City. NHIF is the proposed health insurance scheme for South Sudan and aims at achieving universal health coverage for the entire nation's population. One compounding issue is that over the years, governments' spending on healthcare has been decreasing from 8.4% of national ...
full textPeople's willingness to pay for health insurance in rural Vietnam
BACKGROUND The inequity caused by health financing in Vietnam, which mainly relies on out-of-pocket payments, has put pre-payment reform high on the political agenda. This paper reports on a study of the willingness to pay for health insurance among a rural population in northern Vietnam, exploring whether the Vietnamese are willing to pay enough to sufficiently finance a health insurance syste...
full textWillingness to pay for voluntary health insurance in Tanzania.
OBJECTIVE(S) To assess how willing people would be to join a voluntary health insurance scheme and to see how they respond to changes in the benefit package. We also examined willingness to cross-subsidise the poor. DESIGN Cross-sectional study. SUBJECTS Two thousand two hundread and twenty four households comprising of 1,163 uninsured household heads asked about their willingness to pay fo...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 12 issue 2
pages 2- 2
publication date 2022-03
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023