Devadasan Narayanan, Criel Bart, Van Damme Wim, Ranson Kent, Van der Stuyft Patrick
Achutha Menon Centre for Health Science Studies, SCTIMST, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2007 Mar 15;7:43. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-7-43.
More than 72% of health expenditure in India is financed by individual households at the time of illness through out-of-pocket payments. This is a highly regressive way of financing health care and sometimes leads to impoverishment. Health insurance is recommended as a measure to protect households from such catastrophic health expenditure (CHE). We studied two Indian community health insurance (CHI) schemes, ACCORD and SEWA, to determine whether insured households are protected from CHE.
ACCORD provides health insurance cover for the indigenous population, living in Gudalur, Tamil Nadu. SEWA provides insurance cover for self employed women in the state of Gujarat. Both cover hospitalisation expenses, but only upto a maximum limit of US$23 and US$45, respectively. We reviewed the insurance claims registers in both schemes and identified patients who were hospitalised during the period 01/04/2003 to 31/03/2004. Details of their diagnoses, places and costs of treatment and self-reported annual incomes were obtained. There is no single definition of CHE and none of these have been validated. For this research, we used the following definition; "annual hospital expenditure greater than 10% of annual income," to identify those who experienced CHE.
There were a total of 683 and 3152 hospital admissions at ACCORD and SEWA, respectively. In the absence of the CHI scheme, all of the patients at ACCORD and SEWA would have had to pay OOP for their hospitalisation. With the CHI scheme, 67% and 34% of patients did not have to make any out-of-pocket (OOP) payment for their hospital expenses at ACCORD and SEWA, respectively. Both CHI schemes halved the number of households that would have experienced CHE by covering hospital costs. However, despite this, 4% and 23% of households with admissions still experienced CHE at ACCORD and SEWA, respectively. This was related to the following conditions: low annual income, benefit packages with low maximum limits, exclusion of some conditions from the benefit package, and use of the private sector for admissions.
CHI appears to be effective at halving the incidence of CHE among hospitalised patients. This protection could be further enhanced by improving the design of the CHI schemes, especially by increasing the upper limits of benefit packages, minimising exclusions and controlling costs.
印度超过72%的医疗支出由家庭在患病时通过自掏腰包支付。这是一种极具累退性的医疗融资方式,有时会导致家庭贫困。建议将医疗保险作为一种措施,保护家庭免受此类灾难性医疗支出(CHE)的影响。我们研究了印度的两个社区医疗保险(CHI)计划,即ACCORD和SEWA,以确定参保家庭是否能免受CHE的影响。
ACCORD为居住在泰米尔纳德邦古达勒尔的原住民提供医疗保险。SEWA为古吉拉特邦的自营职业女性提供保险。两者均涵盖住院费用,但最高限额分别为23美元和45美元。我们查阅了两个计划的保险理赔登记册,确定了2003年4月1日至2004年3月31日期间住院的患者。获取了他们的诊断详情、治疗地点和费用以及自我报告的年收入。对于CHE没有单一的定义,且这些定义均未得到验证。在本研究中,我们使用了以下定义:“年度住院支出超过年收入的10%”,以确定那些经历了CHE的人。
ACCORD和SEWA分别共有683例和3152例住院病例。若没有CHI计划,ACCORD和SEWA的所有患者都必须自掏腰包支付住院费用。有了CHI计划后,ACCORD和SEWA分别有67%和34%的患者无需为住院费用进行任何自掏腰包支付。两个CHI计划通过支付住院费用,使可能经历CHE的家庭数量减半。然而,尽管如此,ACCORD和SEWA仍分别有4%和23%的住院家庭经历了CHE。这与以下情况有关:年收入低、福利套餐最高限额低、福利套餐排除某些病症以及在私立医疗机构住院。
CHI似乎能有效将住院患者中CHE的发生率减半。通过改进CHI计划的设计,特别是提高福利套餐的上限、尽量减少排除条款和控制成本,可以进一步加强这种保护。