2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2007.04.018
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A Conceptual Framework for Community-Based Health Insurance in Low-Income Countries: Social Capital and Economic Development

Abstract: Current thinking in major international development agencies construes community-based health insurance (CBHI) as a transitional mechanism to achieving universal coverage for health care in lowincome countries. The policy link between CBHI and universal coverage is implicitly determined by the historical experience of mutual health insurance in countries such as Germany and Japan in the 19 th century, where the socioeconomic context was dramatically different to that of today's much less successful schemes. Th… Show more

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Cited by 64 publications
(57 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
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“…As CBHI was rolled out in LMIC, policymakers and researchers hoped that the community-oriented approach would promote a set of important benefits: trust in CBHI management, solidarity and acceptance of cross-subsidisation, the flow of information, the quality of health services; and reduced fraud, moral hazard and adverse selection (Davies & Carrin, 2001;Hsiao, 2001;Pauly, 2004;Pauly et al, 2006;Zweifel, 2004). Implicit in this view was the idea that CBHI would benefit from existing social capital (Mladovsky & Mossialos, 2008), defined as "the information, trust and norms of reciprocity inhering in one's social network" (Woolcock, 1998, p. 153). It was hypothesised that the community-oriented dynamic would in turn promote high levels of enrolment in CBHI.…”
Section: Community Participation In Cbhimentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As CBHI was rolled out in LMIC, policymakers and researchers hoped that the community-oriented approach would promote a set of important benefits: trust in CBHI management, solidarity and acceptance of cross-subsidisation, the flow of information, the quality of health services; and reduced fraud, moral hazard and adverse selection (Davies & Carrin, 2001;Hsiao, 2001;Pauly, 2004;Pauly et al, 2006;Zweifel, 2004). Implicit in this view was the idea that CBHI would benefit from existing social capital (Mladovsky & Mossialos, 2008), defined as "the information, trust and norms of reciprocity inhering in one's social network" (Woolcock, 1998, p. 153). It was hypothesised that the community-oriented dynamic would in turn promote high levels of enrolment in CBHI.…”
Section: Community Participation In Cbhimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The health and health services variables account for the possibility that adverse selection, geographic access to health service providers, and reliance on traditional medicine explain drop-out from CBHI. The two social capital variables measure the structure of people's social networks, in order to test the hypothesis that CBHI benefits from existing social capital (Mladovsky & Mossialos, 2008), discussed above. The first variable measures having privileged social relationships (with people who may or may not also be members of the CBHI scheme).…”
Section: Other Independent Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study builds on the argument that social capital can promote or constrain CBHI, proposed in a literature review of CBHI by Mladovsky and Mossialos (2008). They adopt the following definition of social capital: "the information, trust and norms of reciprocity inhering in one's social network" (Woolcock, 1998):153).…”
Section: Background: Defining Social Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Drawing on Portes & Sensenbrenner (1993), Mladovsky and Mossialos (2008) argue that distinguishing between "bonding" and "bridging" social capital is essential to understanding whether features of social capital (e.g. expectations between individuals, the trustworthiness of structures, information channels, norms and effective sanctions) have a productive outcome in CBHI.…”
Section: Bonding Versus Bridging Social Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Social capital, understood as 'the information, trust and norms of reciprocity inhering in one's social network' (Woolcock, 1998: 153), appears to explain differences in governance (Putnam et al, 1993;Putnam, 2000), efficiency in human capital formation (Coleman, 1988), the success of development strategies in low income country contexts (Grootaert and van Bastelaer, 2001), and the economic success of migrant groups in the USA (Portes, 1998). Only recently research has focused on the role of social capital as a key variable in understanding health production (Moore et al, 2006;Shortt, 2004;Mladovsky and Mossialos, 2008). Accordingly, the articles in this special issue offer further evidence suggesting that levels of social activity in a group (collective social capital), as well as people's perceptions of being part of a wider community, social networks, and psychosocial trust (individual social capital) influence either health-related behaviour and/or the use of health care.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%