Household Wellbeing and Health in Two Types of Welfare Regimes - A Comparison of (Lower-) Middle Income Households in Chile and Costa Rica

Authors

  • Monica Budowski University of Fribourg
  • Sebastian Schief University of Fribourg
  • William Daniel Vera Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18753/2297-8224-63

Keywords:

health system, household strategies, Chile, Costa Rica, welfare

Abstract

Chile and Costa Rica’s health care systems fare well regarding health indicators. They vary corresponding to their welfare regimes: liberal-informal and social-democratic-informal. We compare how households in precarious prosperity, which are particularly dependent on institutional arrangements, deal with health. We ask: to what extent do health care systems, visible in household strategies, affect wellbeing; do health problems spill over to other life domains? Data consist of qualitative interviews with the same households in 2008, 2009 and 2013 in Chile and Costa Rica. In Chile households were worried about health and how to pay for it and other life domains were affected. In Costa Rica, the national health system limited the consequences of health problems into other life domains. The households’ experience of health systems offers fresh avenues for health policy-making.

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Article

Issue 1/2016

Section

Thematic Section

Number

Article1.3

Language

English

Published

2016-06-09

License

Copyright (c) 2016 Monica Budowski, Sebastian Schief, William Daniel Vera
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.