scholarly journals Does Family Migration Affect Access to Public Health Insurance? Medical Insurance Participation in the Context of Chinese Family Migration Flows

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luchan Liu

Using 2017 Migrant Dynamic Survey (CMDS) data, logistic regression models were developed to explore the family migration rate on health care participation of floating population. The analysis reveals that 68.69% of the floating population in China moves with at least one family member, but the local health insurance participation rate of them are relative low. However, family migration rate has a significant positive correlation with the health insurance participation of the floating population at the destination, which explains by family support and social integration mechanisms. The higher the degree of family migration, the higher the likelihood of participating in local health insurance system. Age, labor contract types, migration range and cities numbers, health records, and the accessibility of health resources have a significant negative correlation with health care participation of the floating population at the destination; gender, health, marriage, education, hukou types, monthly income, migration history, and move duration have a significant positive correlation. The effect of family migration rate on health care participation is weaker in group in which people are low-educated and signs non-fixed-term contract or gets bottom 50% monthly income or under the no-kids family structure. Potential policies informed by these findings are also explored.

2014 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohit M. Pandya ◽  
Dr. D. J. Bhatt

The purpose of present study was to find out correlation between the youths’ adjustment and their health care awareness. The said sample was 240 both males and females in equal numbers was selected through random sampling. Adjustment Inventory & Health Care Awareness Inventory are tailor-made instruments, having sufficient reliability and validity. For the purpose of analysis, The Karl-Pearans ‘r’ technique was used. Present study reveals the result that there is significant positive correlation between the youths’ Adjustment and their Health Care Awareness. The authors suggest that there is a need to explore the rural and the urban youths’ correlation in the line of above study.


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susana J. Ferradas ◽  
G. Nicole Rider ◽  
Johanna D. Williams ◽  
Brittany J. Dancy ◽  
Lauren R. Mcghee

2011 ◽  
Vol 152 (24) ◽  
pp. 946-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miklós Gresz

According to the Semmelweis Plan for Saving Health Care, ”the capacity of the national network of intensive care units in Hungary is one but not the only bottleneck of emergency care at present”. Author shows on the basis of data reported to the health insurance that not on a single calendar day more than 75% of beds in intensive care units were occupied. There were about 15 to 20 thousand sick days which could be considered unnecessary because patients occupying these beds were discharged to their homes directly from the intensive care unit. The data indicate that on the whole bed capacity is not low, only in some institutions insufficient. Thus, in order to improve emergency care in Hungary, the rearrangement of existing beds, rather than an increase of bed capacity is needed. Orv. Hetil., 2011, 152, 946–950.


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