How can healthcare access for Chinese migrants be improved?(1) Migrant workers face two types of healthcare-access exclusion in the workplace: one is financial (because of their income) and the other is social (because of the lack of social networks in the city). We use 2006 data from a survey of rural migrant workers conducted in five of the most economically-advanced cities. The empirical findings support the hypothesis of a return to the hometown for migrant workers with poor health. Apart from residency permits and income, the social integration of migrant workers is also found to be a decisive factor in healthcare access
Rural-to-urban migrant workers are an under-represented group in China's health insurance syste...
BackgroundThe study aimed to understand the factors affecting the health and healthcare of the first...
Over one hundred million rural Chinese residents have migrated to urban areas within China for work....
How can healthcare access for Chinese migrants be improved?(1) Migrant workers face two types of hea...
How can healthcare access for Chinese migrants be improved? Migrant workers face two types of health...
China is experiencing a dramatically increasing process of rural-urban migration, which is almost pa...
Internal migration has induced a profound shift on social structure across China, but the effects on...
Access to social services in China is connected to a system of household registration (Hukou system)...
Most migrant workers in mainland China are officially covered by the New Rural Cooperative Medical S...
Investments in the extension of health insurance coverage, the strengthening of public h...
Drawing on extensive fieldwork in Beijing and Tianjin, and applying a livelihood framework combined ...
Objective: To describe the self-reported health status and service utilisation of employed, retired ...
Cohort study found that being insured and having longer exposure of health insurance significantly i...
BACKGROUND: Since the 1970s, Singapore has turned into one of the major receiving countries of forei...
BACKGROUND:More than 90% of the Chinese population was covered by its three basic social health insu...
Rural-to-urban migrant workers are an under-represented group in China's health insurance syste...
BackgroundThe study aimed to understand the factors affecting the health and healthcare of the first...
Over one hundred million rural Chinese residents have migrated to urban areas within China for work....
How can healthcare access for Chinese migrants be improved?(1) Migrant workers face two types of hea...
How can healthcare access for Chinese migrants be improved? Migrant workers face two types of health...
China is experiencing a dramatically increasing process of rural-urban migration, which is almost pa...
Internal migration has induced a profound shift on social structure across China, but the effects on...
Access to social services in China is connected to a system of household registration (Hukou system)...
Most migrant workers in mainland China are officially covered by the New Rural Cooperative Medical S...
Investments in the extension of health insurance coverage, the strengthening of public h...
Drawing on extensive fieldwork in Beijing and Tianjin, and applying a livelihood framework combined ...
Objective: To describe the self-reported health status and service utilisation of employed, retired ...
Cohort study found that being insured and having longer exposure of health insurance significantly i...
BACKGROUND: Since the 1970s, Singapore has turned into one of the major receiving countries of forei...
BACKGROUND:More than 90% of the Chinese population was covered by its three basic social health insu...
Rural-to-urban migrant workers are an under-represented group in China's health insurance syste...
BackgroundThe study aimed to understand the factors affecting the health and healthcare of the first...
Over one hundred million rural Chinese residents have migrated to urban areas within China for work....