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The determinant of health insurance ownership among pregnant women in Indonesia
Authors: Agung Dwi Laksono, Ratna Dwi Wulandari, and Ratu Matahari
Source: BMC Public Health, Volume 21, Article number: 1538; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11577-z
Topic(s): Maternal health
Reproductive health
Country: Asia
  Indonesia
Published: AUG 2021
Abstract: Health insurance ownership is one indicator of the readiness of pregnant women for the delivery process. The study aimed to analyze the determinants of health insurance ownership among pregnant women in Indonesia. The study population was pregnant women in Indonesia. The study involved 2542 pregnant women in Indonesia. The variables analyzed included type of place of residence, age group, education level, employment status, marital status, parity, wealth status, and know the danger signs of pregnancy. In the final step, the study employed binary logistic regression to explain the relationship between health insurance ownership and predictor variables. The results show that pregnant women with higher education were 3.349 times more likely than no education pregnant women to have health insurance. Pregnant women with wealth status in the middle category were 0.679 times the poorest pregnant women to have health insurance. Meanwhile, the richest pregnant women had 1.358 times more chances than the poorest pregnant women to have health insurance. Grande multiparous pregnant women were 1.544 times more likely than primiparous pregnant women to have health insurance. Pregnant women who know the danger signs of pregnancy were 1.416 times more likely than pregnant women who don’t see the danger signs of pregnancy to have health insurance. The study concluded that four variables, including education level, wealth status, parity, and knowledge of the danger signs of pregnancy, were significant determinants of health insurance ownership in Indonesia.
Web: https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-021-11577-z