2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-014-1335-4
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Using a community-based definition of poverty for targeting poor households for premium subsidies in the context of a community health insurance in Burkina Faso

Abstract: BackgroundOne of the biggest challenges in subsidizing premiums of poor households for community health insurance is the identification and selection of these households. Generally, poverty assessments in developing countries are based on monetary terms. The household is regarded as poor if its income or consumption is lower than a predefined poverty cut-off. These measures fail to recognize the multi-dimensional character of poverty, ignoring community members’ perception and understanding of poverty, leaving… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 73 publications
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“…Furthermore, Kebede (2009) shows that poverty perceptions reflect local circumstances and Alderman (2002) finds that community assessments put more weight on chronic poverty. Considering the wealth criteria defined by the communities in our targeting exercise, it is striking that communities define most of the criteria in terms of capabilities such as 'Has insufficient food', 'Has nothing' or 'Is not able to solve problems by himself' (Savadogo et al, 2015). This fits well into Amartya Sen's capability approach (Sen, 1988) and supports the view that communities consider consumption rather as a 'means to an end'.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 64%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Furthermore, Kebede (2009) shows that poverty perceptions reflect local circumstances and Alderman (2002) finds that community assessments put more weight on chronic poverty. Considering the wealth criteria defined by the communities in our targeting exercise, it is striking that communities define most of the criteria in terms of capabilities such as 'Has insufficient food', 'Has nothing' or 'Is not able to solve problems by himself' (Savadogo et al, 2015). This fits well into Amartya Sen's capability approach (Sen, 1988) and supports the view that communities consider consumption rather as a 'means to an end'.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 64%
“…6 In each community, the procedure started with a publicly convened community meeting, where the facilitators first informed about the purpose of the meeting. Detailed transcripts of these meetings confirm that the official targeting objective of the insurer stated above was also communicated on the ground (Savadogo et al, 2015). The facilitators then initiated a focus group discussion to elicit criteria regarding poverty and wealth.…”
Section: The Community-based Targeting Exercisementioning
confidence: 88%
“…The 2014 national education profile in Burkina shows that over 48% of children of primary school age are out of school [52]. This explains the high rates of [53]. The world has agreed to eradicate extreme poverty by 2030 through the guidance of the SDGs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…People who fall into healthy poverty often cannot access health services, which affects their health level, and ultimately their ability to obtain income. The poverty then worsens and they may easily become trapped in a cycle of "poverty-health deterioration-more poverty" [5].In India, health deprivation is second only to economic income in terms of factors leading to high poverty rates [6]. True health poverty means both the loss of health ability and the deprivation of social health rights.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%