Objective To investigate the rural residents’ payment will for disease control and its influencing factors, so as to provide evidence for the government to make policy of combing disease control and New Rural Co-operative Medical system (NRCMS). Methods The self-designed questionnaire was adopted to investigate 1 117 rural residents from 156 villages, 44 towns, 19 counties (cities, districts) in Henan province. The frequency analysis and the multiple logistic regression analysis were conducted by using SPSS 11.5 software. Results On the basis of NRCMS payment, 68.3% of the rural residents were willing to pay extra for disease control, 62.3% of whom were willing to pay RMB 1.00 or more, and the average willing payment were RMB 3.01±7.66. The multiple logistic regression analysis revealed that the people willing to pay extra were as follows: self-employed, graduates from a secondary technical school, dink family, and the respondents who believed NRCMS had relieved their medical financial burden. Conclusion In practicing the rural public health policy of combining disease control and NRCMS, it is suggested to ask rural residents to pay a little extra money on the basis of current NRCMS payment. The foundation of bringing this policy into force is to keep practicing NRCMS well so as to relieve more financial burdens for rural residents. During the implementation, low income families should be taken into consideration according to their occupation, educational level and family structure.
Objective To investigate the attitude and its influencing factors of Henan provincial rural residents towards the partial usage of funds from the New Rural Co-operative Medical System (NRCMS) for the disease control and prevention, in order to provide evidence for policy making. Methods In Henan province, 1 117 rural residents were randomly sampled with questionnaire from the 156 villages distributing in 44 townships of 19 counties (cities, districts). The frequency analyses, the multiple linear regression analysis and the one-way analysis of variance were conducted. Results Among all the respondents, only 3.4% of the rural residents absolutely disagreed (Zero agreement degree score), 34.4% fully agreed (10 agreement degree scores), and 90.6% had agreement degree scores equal to or more than five. The agreement degree was direct proportional to NRCMS satisfaction degree. The agreement degrees from residents who were relieved from medical financial burdens by NRCMS were higher than the others. 13.2% of rural residents believed that NRCMS did not alleviate their medical financial burden. For the men and women who believed that their village general practitioner was timely at vaccination, their agreement degree was higher than the others who considered vaccination time was late or common. The “timely group” was alone a subset. The “late group” and the “common group” were homogeneous subsets. The proportion of those who answered that the vaccination timeliness at late or common reached 40.6%. Conclusion The proposition to pay funds from the existing NRCMS for disease control and prevention is in line with the will of the majority of rural residents. The combination of disease control and prevention and NRCMS is a strategy in rural healthcare management. A bettering NRCMS and disease control and prevention are the basis of this policy in the future. More attention should be paid to the timeliness of the village general practitioners’ disease control work. It is necessary to perfect the NRCMS policy focusing on residents who hasn’t been relieved from medical financial burdens, so that more population will be benefited.
Objective To survey the relations between the rural residents’ occupational satisfaction, the health policies and demographic factors in Henan province and then to confirm the health policy order and its key target populations. Methods The questionnaires were distributed to 1 117 rural residents in 156 villages among 44 townships in 19 counties (cities, districts). The frequency analysis, multivariate linear regression analysis and multiple comparisons were conducted. Results The average value of rural residents’ occupational satisfaction scored 68.23, among which the complete dissatisfaction scored 0 accounting for 1.9%, the complete satisfaction scored 100 accounting for 9.0%, the one scoring no more than 50 accounted for 20.9%, and the one scoreing equal 80 or more than 80 accounted for 37.5%. By regarding the occupational satisfaction as the dependent variable, the independent variables stayed in the model were as follows in order according to their influence from heavy to little on the dependent variable: new rural cooperative medical system (NRCMS), occupation, village general practitioner’s work, family formation, age, disease prevention and control efforts. The occupational satisfaction was much higher when there were the following conditions: the higher satisfaction with the NRCMS, the more financial burden relieved by the NRCMS, and the higher satisfaction with village general practitioners’ work. The occupational satisfaction was the highest when villagers lived with their spouses, while it was the lowest when villagers lived with their spouses and children, as well as they lived with their parents, spouses and children. The peasants’ occupational satisfaction was the lowest. The occupational satisfaction had significantly negative correlation with cultural level, and had positive correlation with age. Conclusion The occupational satisfaction is an important indicator for assessing the level of social harmony, and is the basis for policy decision-making, implementation, and evaluation. The overall occupational satisfaction of the rural residents in Henan is lower, so the social harmoniy and stability should be alerted. The priority order of the existing rural health policy should be the NRCMS policy, village general practitioner work policy, and village disease prevention and control policy. When we are formulating and implementing the rural health policy, the key target populations should be considered among the people whose families comprise two or three generations, whose occupations are farmers, whose cultural level is lower, and whose ages are younger.