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Health insurance system fragmentation and COVID-19 mortality: Evidence from Peru.

Misael Anaya-MontesHugh Gravelle
Published in: PloS one (2024)
Peru has a fragmented health insurance system in which most insureds can only access the providers in their insurer's network. The two largest sub-systems covered about 53% and 30% of the population at the start of the pandemic; however, some individuals have dual insurance and can thereby access both sets of providers. We use data on 24.7 million individuals who belonged to one or both sub-systems to investigate the effect of dual insurance on COVID-19 mortality. We estimate recursive bivariate probit models using the difference in the distance to the nearest hospital in the two insurance sub-systems as Instrumental Variable. The effect of dual insurance was to reduce COVID-19 mortality risk by 0.23% compared with the sample mean risk of 0.54%. This implies that the 133,128 COVID-19 deaths in the sample would have been reduced by 56,418 (95%CI: 34,894, 78,069) if all individuals in the sample had dual insurance.
Keyphrases
  • health insurance
  • coronavirus disease
  • affordable care act
  • sars cov
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • cardiovascular events
  • risk factors
  • emergency department
  • coronary artery disease
  • machine learning
  • deep learning