Chunhuei Chi

Chunhuei Chi
Oregon State University | OSU · Center for Global Health College of Public Health and Human Sciences

Sc.D., MPH, B.S.

About

50
Publications
12,548
Reads
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821
Citations
Introduction
1.Governance in national health systems and global health governance, including methods for citizens/residents to participate in key decision makings. 2.Comparative national health systems and policy response to the COVID-19 pandemics. 3.Equity in health, health care utilization, and financial burden in health care. 4.Promoting and improving universal health care systems.
Additional affiliations
August 1990 - present
Oregon State University
Position
  • Associate Professor and Coordinator, International Health Program
Education
September 1984 - June 1990
Harvard University
Field of study
  • Health Policy and Management

Publications

Publications (50)
Article
Full-text available
Our paper examines the political considerations in the intersectoral action that was evident during the SAR-COV-2 virus (COVID-19) pandemic through case studies of political and institutional responses in 16 nations (Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Ethiopia, India, New Zealand, Nigeria, Peru, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam,...
Article
Full-text available
Carers were disproportionately harmed in the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite facing an increased risk of contracting the virus, they continued in frontline roles in care services and acted as “shock absorbers” for their families and communities. In this article, we apply an intersectional lens to examine care work and the structural factors disadvantagi...
Article
Background As South Korea achieved universal health care (UHC) in 1989, patients’ access to low-cost health services has highly increased. However, as liability for high-cost procedures is still high, patients’ accessibility to high-cost services is has been limited. For this reason, the Korean government has implemented an initiative of the “Mid-t...
Article
Community health projects have played a crucial role in improving health issues. Listening to communities' voices and achieving community ownership are essential for conducting effective health projects. However, there are limited studies on the frameworks for collecting, aggregating, and operationalizing community preferences and values. In this s...
Article
Full-text available
Previous research on commercial determinants of health has primarily focused on their impact on non-communicable diseases. However, they also impact on infectious diseases and on the broader preconditions for health. We describe, through case studies in 16 countries, how commercial determinants of health were visible during the COVID-19 pandemic, a...
Article
Priority setting is a critical process for national healthcare systems that need to allocate limited resources across unlimited healthcare demands. In recent decades, health policymakers have identified the need to combine technical dimensions of priority setting with political dimensions relating to community values. A range of methods for engagin...
Article
Background: Community participation in health programme planning has gained traction in public health in recent decades. When an idea enters the mainstream, it becomes vulnerable to overuse and dilution, and public health professionals claiming "community participation" may intentionally or unintentionally prevent more meaningful participatory act...
Article
All health systems struggle with unlimited needs for healthcare, yet limited resources with which to address them. Under national health insurance systems, policymakers must make explicit and potentially contested decisions around resource allocation. Policymakers have recognized the need to include public values in decisions regarding the distribu...
Article
Full-text available
Essential healthcare is a civil right. Payments toward healthcare is a moral compulsion, and no less strong than legal compulsion like income tax. Healthcare payments can redistribute disposable income. Redistribution may be vertical (from rich to poor or opposite) and horizontal (from men to women or from households without children to households...
Article
Full-text available
Background This study aims to assess preferences and values for priority setting in healthcare in Chile through an original and innovative survey method. Based on the answers from a previous survey that look into the barriers the Chilean population face, this study considers the preferences of the communities overcoming those barriers. As a result...
Article
Full-text available
According to a published report by the Palestine Central Bureau of Statistics in 2011, 37% of ever-married women in the occupied Palestinian territories (oPt) reported having experienced intimate partner violence (IPV) by their husband at least once in the previous year. However, less than 1% of women who had experienced IPV sought formal help. Thu...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: This study aims to assess preferences and values for priority setting in healthcare in Chile through an original and innovative survey method. Based on the answers from a previous survey that look into the barriers the Chilean population face, this study considers the preferences of the communities overcoming those barriers. As a result...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: This study aims to assess preferences and values for priority setting in healthcare in Chile through an original and innovative survey method. Based on the answers from a previous survey that look into the barriers the Chilean population face, this study considers the preferences of the communities overcoming those barriers. As a result...
Article
The authors’ purpose in conducting this study was to identify barriers faced by survivors of intimate partner violence (IPV) in accessing services in Gaza. We collected data via in-depth interviews with women (ages 18-49; n = 25). Respondents were recruited through convenience sampling from women’s organizations. Interviews were transcribed, transl...
Article
This short article discusses Taiwan's effective COVId-19 pandemic control policies that led to its success in minimizing morbidity and mortality while protecting its economy.
Article
Full-text available
Bangladesh's health finance characterizes by 63.3% out-of-pocket payments and a lack of prepayment mechanism. We assume this heavy burden significantly contributes to poverty. The results indicate, 3.2% of households are not counted as the poor, but in reality, they are. This shows an 8.8% underestimation of poverty. The poverty gap increases from...
Article
Full-text available
Objective. Chile is an attractive case study because of the deep political changes that it underwent over a short period of time: from a universal health service (60s), through a neoliberal reform (70s) and onto a series of legislative reforms (80s–90s). This article aims to explore and assess the evolution of health outcomes, equity, and utilizati...
Article
Full-text available
Essential healthcare is a civil right. Payments toward healthcare is a moral compulsion, and no less strong than legal compulsion like income tax. Healthcare payments can redistribute disposable income. Redistribution may be vertical (from rich to poor or opposite) and horizontal (from men to women or from households without children to households...
Article
Full-text available
Background The relationship between payments towards healthcare and ability to pay is a measure of financial fairness. Analysis of progressivity is important from an equity perspective as well as for macroeconomic and political analysis of healthcare systems. Bangladesh health systems financing is characterized by high out-of-pocket payments (63.3%...
Article
Full-text available
OBJECTIVE To assess the distribution of financial burden in Chile, with a focus on the burden and progressivity of out-of-pocket payment. METHODS Based on the principle of ability to pay, we explore factors that contribute to inequities in the health system finance and issues about the burden of out-of-pocket payment, as well as the progressivity...
Article
Full-text available
Background Predictors of high out-of-pocket household healthcare expenditure are essential for creating effective health system finance policy. In Bangladesh, 63.3% of health expenditure is out-of-pocket and born by households. It is imperative to know what determines household health expenditure. This study aims to investigate the predicting facto...
Article
Full-text available
The concept of moral hazard has profound impacts on many countries' health insurance policies. Its theoretical framework, however, has been contentious among academics, especially health economists. This academic debate originated from two major sources: the transformation of the definition of, and the competition among different theoretical founda...
Article
Background: This work focuses on assessing the role of professional community health workers (CHWs) in strengthening the health system.Methods: This cross-national case study draws from two different sources, a program in Zambia and a program in Japan. For both programs, we examine CHWs, who were trained in education and health, as the link between...
Article
Objective: The present study was aimed at analysing socioeconomic inequity regarding the use of health services in Ecuador, inequity regarding the geographic distribution of healthcare-related human resources and reflecting on the challenges concerning equity which the Ecuadorian health system is currently facing. Methods: The Ecuadorian Demogra...
Article
Full-text available
One of the most extensive Chilean health care reforms occurred in July 2005, when the Regime of Explicit Health Guarantees (AUGE) became effective. This reform guarantees coverage for a specific set of health conditions. Thus, the purpose of this study is to provide timely evidence for policy makers to understand the current distribution and equity...
Article
New medical technologies have often been applied to inpatient care; however, when a new medical technology becomes available in the market but is not yet covered by national health insurance, such a technology is excluded from the Diagnosis-Related Group (DRG) list. Consequently, hospitals may be reluctant to use it. Ideally, once a new medical tec...
Article
Full-text available
This article aims to explore three main concepts related to the professional development of nursing professionals. This paper first critically reviews and reinterprets scientific evidence on the relationship between nurse staff allocation and healthcare outcomes and then challenges some of the common interpretations of this evidence in the professi...
Article
The purpose of this article is to investigate one core research question: How can health information technology (HIT) be assessed in a national health care system context? We examine this question by taking a systematic approach within a national care system, in which the purpose of HIT is to contribute to a common national health care system's goa...
Article
Full-text available
To examine the relationship between migration and migrant remittances and health care utilization in Ecuador, and to identify any potential equalizing effects. Using data from the 2004 National Demographic and Maternal & Child Health Survey (ENDEMAIN), a multilevel multivariate analysis was conducted to assess the relationship of two migrant predic...
Article
This study investigated teachers' perceptions of their role as HIV/AIDS educators and also their role in providing care for orphans and vulnerable children (OVC) across the different school systems in Lusaka, Zambia. Researchers used a combined quantitative and qualitative narrative approach. Original cross-sectional data were collected through fac...
Article
In this study, we utilized the nested multinomial logit model to estimate the Willingness To Pay (WTP) values for different National Health Insurance (NHI) coverage plans in Taiwan. The WTP value for having care from clinics in a Hospital Care Only (HCO) plan is NT$178 (US$6) per person/month. The WTP value for having care from hospitals in a Clini...
Article
Full-text available
There are few studies that have analyzed the context of health care utilization, particularly in Latin America. This study examines the context of utilization of health services in Ecuador; focusing on the relationship between provision of services and use of both preventive and curative services. This study is cross-sectional and analyzes data fro...
Article
Full-text available
This article examines socio-economic determinants and inequality of health care utilization in Ecuador. Despite health reform efforts in Latin America, drastic socio-economic inequalities persist across the region, including Ecuador. Almost a third of Ecuador's population lack regular access to health services, while more than two-thirds have no he...
Article
This paper argues on ethical and practical grounds for more widespread use of an integrated approach to refugee healthcare, and proposes a basic model of assessment for integrated systems. A defining element of an integrated approach is an equal ability by refugee and host nationals to access the same healthcare resources from the same providers. T...
Article
Full-text available
The objective of this study is to estimate the amount of and factors associated with out-of-pocket (OOP) payment for medical care under Taiwan's National Health Insurance (NHI) program. This research used two methods to collect original data. The first method consisted of using a sample household survey and household diary records to collect data o...
Conference Paper
Rationale: During the last two decades, we observed the acceleration of economic globalization throughout most part of the world. Nations that intensified their economic globalization, however, experienced different impacts on their health development. While some nations' health development benefited from their economic globalization, others suffer...
Article
Full-text available
RATIONALE: American Indian/Alaska Native elders (Native elders) are a small percentage of the U.S. elder population, thus their disparities are seldom identified. At the same time, they tend to face greater health care needs and lower access to health care than the average U.S. population. This presents a need for more investigation. OBJECTIVES: Th...
Article
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between adoption of case payment for laparoscopic cholecystectomy (LC) and the growth rate of LC, outcomes of patients undergoing LC, and total healthcare expenditures on cholecystectomy. We used the claims data from Bureau of National Health Insurance (BNHI) to identify patients who underwe...
Article
The purpose of this article is to first conceptualize health services utilization behavior as event counts. Based on this concept and behavioral theory, the author presents the Generalized Event Count model as an alternative modeling tool for studying health services utilization. This model is theory driven and is consistent with behavioral assumpt...
Article
This article examines the use of Chinese medicine in Taiwan. Based on a national sample survey, the authors investigated how Chinese medicine is being used and factors that are associated with its use among the Taiwanese. Results of the study suggest that Chinese medicine use among this population depends on health conditions, and that having a reg...
Article
Full-text available
This paper examines the practice of Chinese medicine in Taiwan. Using a national sample survey of Chinese medicine physicians, supplemented by another national survey of Chinese medicine hospitals and government records, the authors study the education and training background of Chinese medicine physicians, their mode of practice, their productivit...
Article
Full-text available
Since the World Health Organization officially promoted traditional medicine in developing countries in 1978, there have been increasing interests among developing countries in integrating traditional medicine into a national health care system. Most of these policies, however, tend to be the policy of coexistence instead of integration. This paper...
Article
Full-text available
Access to health care in North Dakota, a frontier state, has been a widely debated policy issue. Historically, the focus of North Dakota health policy efforts has been directed to issues pertaining to the provision of health care services. During the economic recession of the I 980s, an out-migration of North Dakota residents left the state with a...

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