Academic literature on the topic 'Health insurance regimes'

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Journal articles on the topic "Health insurance regimes"

1

Wilson, Deborah. "Acquisition and disclosure of genetic information under alternative policy regimes: an economic analysis." Health Economics, Policy and Law 1, no. 3 (2006): 263–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1744133106003021.

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A current policy issue is whether, and if so under what circumstances, insurance companies should be given access to genetic test results. The insurance industry argues for mandatory disclosure in order to avoid problems of adverse selection; an alternative would be a moratorium or legislation preventing such disclosure; a third option a voluntary disclosure law. This paper investigates the impact of these policies on individuals' incentives to both acquire genetic information and to disclose it to providers of health and/or life insurance. The theoretical framework used to inform this analysi
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2

Chaudhury, Suman Kalyan, and Sanjay Kanti Das. "Trends in Marketing of New Insurance Schemes and Distribution: An Empirical Study on Indian Life Insurance Sector." Journal of Business and Technology (Dhaka) 9, no. 2 (2015): 61–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jbt.v9i2.26196.

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Insurance has been an integral part of financial services system and recognised as a cornerstone of a country’s financial health and symbol of progress. Insurance provides for the financial security of citizens and their families. The present paper discusses the role of marketing in insurance distribution of life insurance sector in India as insurance offers a valuable investment advices and serves as an effective step towards both individual and national financial stability. The waves of globalisation have deeply influenced the insurance sector worldwide. Financial globalisation has been stro
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3

Clemens, Jeffrey, and Benedic Ippolito. "Uncompensated Care and the Collapse of Hospital Payment Regulation: An Illustration of the Tinbergen Rule." Public Finance Review 47, no. 6 (2019): 1002–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1091142119871333.

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The primary objective of “all-payer” rate setting—regulatory regimes through which states set hospital payment rates for all insurers—was to control costs through consistent, centrally regulated payments. These regimes were often linked, however, to an ancillary goal of financing care for the uninsured. We show that the surcharge mechanism used to achieve this secondary objective decreased the stability of these payment regimes. This instability reflected a feedback loop from surcharge rates to insurance coverage and back to the quantities of uncompensated care in need of financing. Instabilit
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4

LYNCH, JULIA. "The Age-Orientation of Social Policy Regimes in OECD Countries." Journal of Social Policy 30, no. 3 (2001): 411–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047279401006365.

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This article presents a series of measures of the extent to which social policies in twenty-one OECD countries are oriented towards the support of elderly (over 65 or in formal retirement) and non-elderly (under 65 and not retired) population groups. Employing breakdowns by age in spending on social insurance, education and health, tax expenditures on welfare substituting goods, and housing policy outcomes, this article shows that countries tend to demonstrate a consistent age-orientation across a variety of policy areas and instruments. After correcting for the demographic structure of the po
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5

Murphy, John. "The Historical Development of Indonesian Social Security." Asian Journal of Social Science 47, no. 2 (2019): 255–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15685314-04702005.

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Abstract Indonesia’s National Social Security System (SJSN) aspires to universal coverage of insurance for health, retirement, and occupational benefits, such as employment injury. This article surveys the successive layers of policy development since the 1960s, in pensions and health benefits for some, and in social assistance programmes for the poor in the Reformasi era. Clarifying the nature of prior developments helps to understand the challenges facing the SJSN. These initiatives are assessed in terms of the literature on welfare regimes, applied as an interpretative tool, rather than in
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6

Kamphuis, Mascha, Hubert W. Vliegen, Ton Vogels, et al. "The need for cardiac follow-up in adults with mild congenital cardiac disease." Cardiology in the Young 12, no. 5 (2002): 474–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047951102000811.

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Objective: To discuss the need for continuing cardiac surveillance in adults with hemodynamically insignificant congenital cardiac disease. Methods: In 82 patients with mild congenital cardiac malformations, aged from 17 to 32 years, we investigated the subjective health status, the health-related quality of life, any difficulties encountered in daily life, the regularity of follow-up, current diagnosis, and antibiotic prophylaxis. Results: The subjective health status, and the health-related quality of life, did not differ from those of the general population. Nevertheless, patients experienc
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7

García, Helena Alviar, and Günter Frankenberg. "Paying for the Consequences. How Privatization and Austerity Disabled Infection Protection Law." Verfassung in Recht und Übersee 54, no. 1 (2021): 27–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0506-7286-2021-1-27.

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The authors argue that the privatization of health care not only privileges profitable health provision and loses sight especially of community services and basic medical treatment but also tends to imply a crippling change of the legal tools available to face a pandemic. Privatization, flanked by austerity programs, disempowers public health institutions and authorities as well as disables the regular legal regimes covering public health. When confronted by a pandemic, they hold, privatized systems lay bare the limitations of healthcare understood as a business and framed within insurance con
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8

Domapielle, Maximillian Kolbe, Constance Awinpoka Akurugu, and Emmanuel Kanchebe Derbile. "Vertical equity in access to health insurance services: An exploration of perceptions and enrolment in the Jirapa Municipality, north-western Ghana." Journal of Planning and Land Management 2, no. 1 (2021): 1–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.36005/jplm.v2i1.28.

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Given concerns about the spiralling cost of health services in low and middle-income countries (LMICs), this study draws on a framework for assessing poverty and access to health services to ascertain progress towards achieving vertical equity in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) in a rural setting in northern Ghana. Rural-urban disparities in financial access to NHIS services are seldom explored in equity-related studies although there is a knowledge gap of progress and challenges of implementing the scheme’s vertical equity objectives to inform social health protection planning and
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9

Guo, Yawei, Jingjie Sun, Simeng Hu, Stephen Nicholas, and Jian Wang. "Hospitalization Costs and Financial Burden on Families with Children with Depression: A Cross-Section Study in Shandong Province, China." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 19 (2019): 3526. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193526.

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Background: Depression, one of the most frequent mental disorders, affects more than 350 million people of all ages worldwide, with China facing an increased prevalence of depression. Childhood depression is on the rise; globally, and in China. This study estimates the hospitalization costs and the financial burden on families with children suffering from depression and recommends strategies both to improve the health care of children with depression and to reduce their families’ financial burden. Methods: The data were obtained from the hospitalization information system of 297 general hospit
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10

Downes, Harold, and Fiona Austin. "Know what is at stake: the importance of the safety regulatory interface for the personal liability of executives." APPEA Journal 53, no. 2 (2013): 442. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/aj12053.

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The operations of a company involved in the Australian petroleum industry are subject to a range of health and safety regulatory regimes. Knowing what regulatory regime applies to each of the company’s operations is not only important to ensure the company’s compliance but also to determine the due diligence priorities and exposures of its executives. Different regulatory schemes can apply to a company’s exploration, drilling, construction, accommodation, transport, and administrative operations conducted onshore and offshore and in multiple jurisdictions. Additional complicating factors also
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