Public Views of Health Insurance in Japan during the ERA of Attaining Universal Health Coverage: A Secondary Analysis of an Opinion Poll on Health Insurance in 1967
Author(s) -
Ikuma Nozaki,
Koji Wada,
Osamu Utsunomiya
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
deleted journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.579
H-Index - 13
ISSN - 2279-9028
DOI - 10.4081/jphr.2017.884
Subject(s) - health insurance , self insurance , group insurance , actuarial science , business , willingness to pay , health care , public opinion , income protection insurance , public health insurance , public health , medical underwriting , opinion poll , insurance policy , general insurance , economic growth , economics , medicine , political science , nursing , politics , law , microeconomics
While Japan’s success in achieving universal health insurance over a short period with controlled healthcare costs has been studied from various perspectives, that of beneficiaries have been overlooked. We conducted a secondary analysis of an opinion poll on health insurance in 1967, immediately after reaching universal coverage. We found that people continued to face a slight barrier to healthcare access (26.8% felt medical expenses were a heavy burden) and had high expectations for health insurance (60.5% were satisfied with insured medical services and 82.4% were willing to pay a premium). In our study, younger age, having children before school age, lower living standards, and the health insurance scheme were factors that were associated with a willingness to pay premiums. Involving high-income groups in public insurance is considered to be the key to ensuring universal coverage of social insurance
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