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Relationship between health insurance enrolment and unintended pregnancy in Ghana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2023

Kola’ Oyediran*
Affiliation:
Senior M&E Advisor, John Snow, Inc. Arlington, VA 22202
Nikki Davis
Affiliation:
Senior Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation Advisor John Snow Inc. Arlington, VA 22202
*
*Corresponding author: Email: kboyediran@gmail.com

Abstract

Context:

The effect of health insurance coverage on sexual and reproductive health, especially unintended pregnancy, has scantly been researched. Using the 2014 Ghana Demographic and Health Survey, the study examined the links between women’s health insurance enrolment on unintended pregnancy in Ghana.

Method:

The sample consisted of 9,396 women aged 15-49 years, but the analysis was limited to the 4,544 women who were pregnant in the two years preceding the survey. The effects of health insurance enrolment on unintended pregnancy was examined with the propensity score matching. The health insurance enrolment was the treatment variable and unintended pregnancy as the outcome variable.

Results:

This study showed that 66.0% of all women surveyed had health insurance coverage and 31.8% of all women of childbearing age who were currently or had previously been pregnant reported having at least one unintended pregnancy. Thirty percent of insured women had an unintended pregnancy, compared to 37% of uninsured women. The results showed that education, household wealth index, religion, and type of marital union were significant predictor of health insurance coverage among Ghanaian women. The PSM split the women based on their health insurance status. After matching, the difference between the insured and uninsured women reduces significantly. Results demonstrated that, the probability of unintended pregnancy was 0.312 among insured women and 0.351 among those not insured in Ghana. This implies that having health insurance coverage will help in reducing the likelihood of women experiencing unintended pregnancy.

Conclusions:

Results highlight the importance of the target of universal health coverage under the sustainable development goal 3 and demonstrate that expanding existing health insurance schemes within Ghana could contribute to reducing the number unintended pregnancies experienced each year.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

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