Modalities of Healthcare Payment and their Consequences – A Qualitative Study on Kenyan Doctors
Date
2019-10-16Author
Yulu, Elijah
Brotherton, B Jason
Kamau, Geoffrey Gitau
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Kenyan government has put a spirited reform to ensure all Kenyans get universal
healthcare. This has led to restructuring of several entities among them the health insurance
industry. This is geared at alleviating the burden of catastrophic expenditure on health from
the poor Kenyans. However, insurance uptake remains at less than a quarter of the
population with many Kenyans still paying for healthcare out-of-pocket. These out-ofpocket
payers often don’t afford the ever-increasing cost of healthcare in Kenya. This study
looked at how doctors deal with patients given their modality of payment. This was an
online based survey that was distributed to Kenyan doctors via email by Kenya Medical
Association. The survey sought information from the respondents on how they dealt with
patients given their modality of payment. In addition, respondents were asked to provide an
example of a case they had dealt with that touched on each payment modality. Respondents
gave their experiences where insurance had influenced their clinical decisions. Codes
developed from the prose were; “inability to pay”, “harmful to the patient”, “changed the
prescription” among others Health insurance played a crucial role whenever respondents
made decisions. Top on the list of things that the majority indicated would be considered is
insurance status and/or their ability of patients to pay for the services. Respondents are
stuck in a limbo; striving to give the best care to patients but limited by the patients’
inability to pay. In explaining their experiences, respondents explain a situation where they
intend to offer the best, but patients cannot afford. This especially so for those without
health insurance who end up either not getting services or at the very best, get inferior
services