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Supplemental health insurance and equality of access in Belgium

Authors :
Carine Van de Voorde
Ann Lecluyse
Diana De Graeve
Erik Schokkaert
Tom Van Ourti
Applied Economics
Source :
Health economics, Health Economics, 19(4), 377-395. John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The effects of supplemental health insurance on health-care consumption crucially depend on specific institutional features of the health-care system. We analyse the situation in Belgium, a country with a very broad coverage in compulsory social health insurance and where supplemental insurance mainly refers to extra-billing in hospitals. Within this institutional background, we find only weak evidence of adverse selection in the coverage of supplemental health insurance. We find much stronger effects of socio-economic background. We estimate a bivariate probit model and cannot reject the assumption of exogeneity of insurance availability for the explanation of health-care use. A count model for hospital care shows that supplemental insurance has no significant effect on the number of spells, but a negative effect on the number of nights per spell. We comment on the implications of our findings for equality of access to health care in Belgium.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10579230
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health economics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ac4a9b4f1944e3ff3fbd9aa5821139b2