Yuyin Xiao
Yuyin Xiao's research areas include health service systems, population health, and digital healthcare. In June 2023, Yuyin received her PhD in Public Health from Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine. She is currently a postdoctoral scholar at the Stanford Center on China's Economy and Institutions, focusing on research related to digital interventions in early childhood development and caregivers' mental health.
Yunwei Chen
Yunwei is a Postdoctoral Scholar at Stanford University, with a background training in global health economics. Prior to joining Stanford, she earned a PhD in Health Policy and Management (Economics Track) from the Gillings School of Global Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2024. Her research explores innovative solutions for effective delivery of public health interventions in resource-limited settings with rigorous experimental and quasi-experimental designs. Her current research agenda is centered on integrating digital health technologies to develop comprehensive and tailored interventions for children and mothers living in resource-limited settings during crucial developmental stages, aiming for both effectiveness and scalability.
Qi Jiang
Qi Jiang is pursuing her Ph.D. in Health Policy at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health. She is dedicated to addressing health inequalities faced by women and children in underdeveloped regions. Her work primarily focuses on developing, evaluating, and advancing interventions that aim to improve early child development and caregiver mental health at scale. In her ongoing projects, Qi is part of the team to conceptualize, develop, and evaluate a mental health intervention targeting caregivers of young children, known as the Thinking Healthy Extended Program (THEP). Before starting her Ph.D. program, Qi worked as a predoctoral fellow at REAP on several early childhood development projects in rural China.
IFPRI Blog: Lockdowns are Protecting China's Rural Families from COVID-19, but the Economic Burden is Heavy
BY SCOTT ROZELLE, HEATHER RAHIMI, HUAN WANG AND EVE DILL
COVID-19 lockdowns have major impacts on migrant workers and supply chains that depend on them. Scott Rozelle and his team find that the lockdowns in China were successful in protecting rural areas from COVID infections, but that the cost was severe: Poor rural households cut down on education, nutrition, and health expenditures and lost around $100 billion in migrant worker wages.—Johan Swinnen, series co-editor and IFPRI Director General.
Heterogeneous Impacts of Basic Social Health Insurance on Medical Expenditure: Evidence from China's New Cooperative Medical Scheme
Inequities in the Allocation of Medical Resources in China's Township Health Centers
- Read more about Inequities in the Allocation of Medical Resources in China's Township Health Centers
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to produce a high-quality measure of the nature of healthcare resources available in China’s Township Health Centers (THCs), paying particular attention to equity between high- and low-income areas.
Design/methodology/approach – This study makes use of data from a nearly nationally representative survey in rural China conducted by the Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2011. The samples of towns were selected randomly from 25 counties located in five provinces from different regions of China. Data were collected through questionnaires and direct observation.
Findings – The THCs located in rich areas have higher levels of human resources than poor areas. THCs in rich areas also have more fixed assets than those in poor areas. In fact, even though the Chinese Ministry of Health mandates that all THCs have certain basic levels of medical equipment and facilities, many THCs in poor areas do not have them. The allocation of mandated equipment is unequal.
Practical implications – These findings suggest that China’s government should pay more attention to THCs located in poor areas, especially in light of new initiatives to improve health care in poor rural areas.
Originality/value – This is the first nationally representative study to employ rigorous empirics to investigate the extent of inequality in allocation of resources within THCs across China.
Keywords China, Health, Inequality, Rural development, Medical resources, Township health centers
Paper type Research paper
A comparison of rural and urban healthcare consumption and health insurance
Findings: The major results are that although the factors driving the decisions on health insurance participation are basically the same for rural and urban citizens, the participation levels are quite different. The major difference is that urban SHI has higher coverage and urban citizens have higher income, resulting in a much larger urban medical expenditure.
Intended And Unintended Consequences Of China’s Zero Markup Drug Policy
Since economic liberalization in the late 1970s, China's health care providers have grown heavily reliant on revenue from drugs, which they both prescribe and sell. To curb abuse and to promote the availability, safety, and appropriate use of essential drugs, China introduced its national essential drug list in 2009 and implemented a zero markup policy designed to decouple provider compensation from drug prescription and sales. The authors collected and analyzed representative data from China's township health centers and their catchment-area populations both before and after the reform. They found large reductions in drug revenue, as intended by policy makers. However, they also found a doubling of inpatient care that appeared to be driven by supply, instead of demand. Thus, the reform had an important unintended consequence: China's health care providers have sought new, potentially inappropriate, forms of revenue.
Good and Bad News From China's New Cooperative Medical Scheme
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Abstract: The overall goal of this article is to understand the progress in implementing the New Cooperative Medical Scheme, while seeking to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the programme and, in particular, to understand its effects on the incidence of catastrophic medical payment. The study is based on two rounds of nationally representative household survey data collected in 2005 and 2008. The study found that the programme has a very high level of participation, and has increased farmers’ use of medical services. However, despite efforts by both central and local governments and high household participation, the programme is only partially achieving its policy objectives. In particular, it has been able to extend to almost all of the rural population, but has failed to cover expenses for catastrophic illness, due to insufficient funds.
Abstract The overall goal of this article is to understand the progress in implementing the New Cooperative
Medical Scheme, while seeking to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the programme and, in particular,
to understand its effects on the incidence of catastrophic medical payment. The study is based on two
rounds of nationally representative household survey data collected in 2005 and 2008. The study found that
the programme has a very high level of participation, and has increased farmers’ use of medical services.
However, despite efforts by both central and local governments and high household participation, the
programme is only partially achieving its policy objectives. In particular, it has been able to extend to almost
all of the rural population, but has failed to cover expenses for catastrophic illness, due to insufficient funds.
