How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China

Abstract Background The proportion of people aged 60 years or over is growing faster than other age groups. Traditionally, retirement has been considered as both a loss to the labour market and an additional economic burden on the nation. More recently, it is widely accepted that retired people can...

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Main Authors: Shanquan Chen, Xi Chen, Stephen Law, Henry Lucas, Shenlan Tang, Qian Long, Lei Xue, Zheng Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05831-0
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spelling doaj-19da84b1ebc949ffae89dff40a10cb8f2020-11-25T04:09:58ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632020-11-0120111210.1186/s12913-020-05831-0How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural ChinaShanquan Chen0Xi Chen1Stephen Law2Henry Lucas3Shenlan Tang4Qian Long5Lei Xue6Zheng Wang7The School of Clinical Medicine, University of CambridgeDepartment of Health Policy and Management, Yale School of Public HealthFaculty of Medicine and Health, University of SydneyInstitute of Development Studies, University of SussexDepartment of Population Health Science, Duke Global Health Institute, Duke UniversityGlobal Health Research Center, Duke Kunshan UniversityInstitute for Hospital Management, Tsinghua UniversityKey Laboratory of Environmental Pollution Monitoring and Disease Control, Ministry of Education, Guizhou Medical UniversityAbstract Background The proportion of people aged 60 years or over is growing faster than other age groups. Traditionally, retirement has been considered as both a loss to the labour market and an additional economic burden on the nation. More recently, it is widely accepted that retired people can still contribute to society in many ways, though the extent of their contributions will depend heavily on their state of health. In this context, a significant practical issue is how to encourage older people to use the health services they need. This study aims to evaluate the effects of pensions on older adults’ health service utilization, and estimate the level of pension required to influence such utilization. Methods Using data from a nationally representative sample survey, the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, we adopted a fuzzy regression discontinuity design and undertook segmented regression analysis. Results It was found that a pension did encourage low-income people to use both outpatient (OR = 1.219, 95% 1.018–1.460) and inpatient services (OR = 1.269, 95% 1.020–1.579); but also encouraged both low- and high-income people to choose self-treatment, specifically over-the-counter (OR = 1.208, 95% 1.037–1.407; OR = 1.206, 95% 1.024–1.419; respectively) and traditional Chinese medicines (OR = 1.452, 95% 1.094–1.932; OR = 1.456, 95% 1.079–1.955; respectively). However, receiving a pension had no effect on the frequency of outpatient and inpatient service use. Breakpoints for a pension to promote health service utilization were mainly located in the range 55–95 CNY (7.1–12.3 EUR or 8.0–13.8 USD). Conclusions A pension was found to have mixed effects on health service utilization for different income groups. Our study enriches existing evidence on the impact of pensions on healthcare-seeking behaviour and can be helpful in policy design and the formulation of improved models relating to pensions and healthcare utilisation.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05831-0PensionHealth service utilizationRegression discontinuity designSegmented regression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shanquan Chen
Xi Chen
Stephen Law
Henry Lucas
Shenlan Tang
Qian Long
Lei Xue
Zheng Wang
spellingShingle Shanquan Chen
Xi Chen
Stephen Law
Henry Lucas
Shenlan Tang
Qian Long
Lei Xue
Zheng Wang
How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China
BMC Health Services Research
Pension
Health service utilization
Regression discontinuity design
Segmented regression
author_facet Shanquan Chen
Xi Chen
Stephen Law
Henry Lucas
Shenlan Tang
Qian Long
Lei Xue
Zheng Wang
author_sort Shanquan Chen
title How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China
title_short How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China
title_full How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China
title_fullStr How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China
title_full_unstemmed How and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural China
title_sort how and to what extent can pensions facilitate increased use of health services by older people: evidence from social pension expansion in rural china
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background The proportion of people aged 60 years or over is growing faster than other age groups. Traditionally, retirement has been considered as both a loss to the labour market and an additional economic burden on the nation. More recently, it is widely accepted that retired people can still contribute to society in many ways, though the extent of their contributions will depend heavily on their state of health. In this context, a significant practical issue is how to encourage older people to use the health services they need. This study aims to evaluate the effects of pensions on older adults’ health service utilization, and estimate the level of pension required to influence such utilization. Methods Using data from a nationally representative sample survey, the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study, we adopted a fuzzy regression discontinuity design and undertook segmented regression analysis. Results It was found that a pension did encourage low-income people to use both outpatient (OR = 1.219, 95% 1.018–1.460) and inpatient services (OR = 1.269, 95% 1.020–1.579); but also encouraged both low- and high-income people to choose self-treatment, specifically over-the-counter (OR = 1.208, 95% 1.037–1.407; OR = 1.206, 95% 1.024–1.419; respectively) and traditional Chinese medicines (OR = 1.452, 95% 1.094–1.932; OR = 1.456, 95% 1.079–1.955; respectively). However, receiving a pension had no effect on the frequency of outpatient and inpatient service use. Breakpoints for a pension to promote health service utilization were mainly located in the range 55–95 CNY (7.1–12.3 EUR or 8.0–13.8 USD). Conclusions A pension was found to have mixed effects on health service utilization for different income groups. Our study enriches existing evidence on the impact of pensions on healthcare-seeking behaviour and can be helpful in policy design and the formulation of improved models relating to pensions and healthcare utilisation.
topic Pension
Health service utilization
Regression discontinuity design
Segmented regression
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-020-05831-0
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