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Journal Article

Citation

Guan H, Wang H, Huang J, Du K, Zhao J, Boswell M, Shi Y, Iyer M, Rozelle S. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018; 15(5): e15050883.

Affiliation

Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. rozelle@stanford.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/ijerph15050883

PMID

29710797

Abstract

More than 60 million children in rural China are “left-behind”—both parents live and work far from their rural homes and leave their children behind. This paper explores differences in how left-behind and non-left-behind children seek health remediation in China’s vast but understudied rural areas. This study examines this question in the context of a program to provide vision health care to myopic rural students. The data come from a randomized controlled trial of 13,100 students in Gansu and Shaanxi provinces in China. The results show that without a subsidy, uptake of health care services is low, even if individuals are provided with evidence of a potential problem (an eyeglasses prescription). Uptake rises two to three times when this information is paired with a subsidy voucher redeemable for a free pair of prescription eyeglasses. In fact, left-behind children who receive an eyeglasses voucher are not only more likely to redeem it, but also more likely to use the eyeglasses both in the short term and long term. In other words, in terms of uptake of care and compliance with treatment, the voucher program benefitted left-behind students more than non-left-behind students. The results provide a scientific understanding of differential impacts for guiding effective implementation of health policy to all groups in need in developing countries.


Language: en

Keywords

healthcare; left-behind children; randomized controlled trial; rural China

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