2020
DOI: 10.1111/ggi.13935
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The effects of raising the long‐term care insurance co‐payment rate on the utilization of long‐term care services

Abstract: AimThe effect of raising insurance co‐payment rates on healthcare service utilization in Japan remains unclear. In this study, we utilized patient‐level long‐term care (LTC) insurance claims data to analyze these effects.MethodsClaims data were obtained on individuals certified as requiring LTC in City A and City B, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan during August 2014–July 2016. Individuals whose LTC insurance co‐payment rate increased from 10% to 20% in August 2015 were regarded as high‐income individuals; individual… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The self-reported health of older adults may be affected by unobserved factors, such as the price and quality of CHECS ( 23 ), which may relate to the use of CHECS by older adults ( 24 ). In addition, a possible reverse causation between CHECS utilization and self-reported health: older people with poorer health are more likely to use CHECS ( 25 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The self-reported health of older adults may be affected by unobserved factors, such as the price and quality of CHECS ( 23 ), which may relate to the use of CHECS by older adults ( 24 ). In addition, a possible reverse causation between CHECS utilization and self-reported health: older people with poorer health are more likely to use CHECS ( 25 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The systems are mainly financed by payroll contributions (Germany and Israel) or by a mix of payroll contributions and taxes (Japan, the Republic of Korea and the Netherlands). Co‐payments help care systems control costs by lowering incentives for service use (Soga et al, 2020) and redistribute economic burdens among income groups through means‐testing (Wouterse, Hussem and Wong, 2022). Access is regulated by assessment tests, which in some form consider living circumstances and impairments in mobility, cognitive ability, behaviour, ADL, and IADL.…”
Section: Experiences and Potential Solutions From Selected Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The systems are mainly financed by payroll contributions (Germany and Israel) or by a mix of payroll contributions and taxes (Netherlands, Japan, and South Korea). Copayments help care systems control costs by lowering incentives for service use (Soga et al, 2020) and redistribute economic burdens among income groups through means-testing (Wouterse et al, 2021). 2 Access is regulated by assessment tests, which in some form consider living circumstances and impairments in mobility, cognitive ability, behavior, ADL, and IADL.…”
Section: Experiences and Potential Solutions From Selected Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%