UCL Centre for International Health and Development, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London, WC1N 1EH, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Mar 8;11:150. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-150.
The cost of maternity care can be a barrier to access that may increase maternal and neonatal mortality risk. We analyzed spending on maternity care in urban slum communities in Mumbai to better understand the equity of spending and the impact of spending on household poverty.
We used expenditure data for maternal and neonatal care, collected during post-partum interviews. Interviews were conducted in 2005-2006, with a sample of 1200 slum residents in Mumbai (India). We analysed expenditure by socio-economic status (SES), calculating a Kakwani Index for a range of spending categories. We also calculated catastrophic health spending both with and without adjustment for coping strategies. This identified the level of catastrophic payments incurred by a household and the prevalence of catastrophic payments in this population. The analysis also gave an understanding of the protection from medical poverty afforded by coping strategies (for example saving and borrowing).
A high proportion of respondents spent catastrophically on care. Lower SES was associated with a higher proportion of informal payments. Indirect health expenditure was found to be (weakly) regressive as the poorest were more likely to use wage income to meet health expenses, while the less poor were more likely to use savings. Overall, the incidence of catastrophic maternity expenditure was 41%, or 15% when controlling for coping strategies. We found no significant difference in the incidence of catastrophic spending across wealth quintiles, nor could we conclude that total expenditure is regressive.
High expenditure as a proportion of household resources should alert policymakers to the burden of maternal spending in this context. Differences in informal payments, significantly regressive indirect spending and the use of savings versus wages to finance spending, all highlight the heavier burden borne by the most poor. If a policy objective is to increase institutional deliveries without forcing households deeper into poverty, these inequities will need to be addressed. Reducing out-of-pocket payments and better regulating informal payments should have direct benefits for the most poor. Alternatively, targeted schemes aimed at assisting the most poor in coping with maternal spending (including indirect spending) could reduce the household impact of high costs.
产妇保健费用可能成为获取医疗服务的障碍,从而增加产妇和新生儿死亡的风险。我们分析了孟买市区贫民窟社区的产妇保健费用支出情况,以更好地了解支出的公平性以及支出对家庭贫困的影响。
我们使用了 2005-2006 年产后访谈期间收集的产妇和新生儿保健支出数据。在印度孟买,我们对 1200 名贫民窟居民进行了抽样调查,分析了社会经济地位(SES)的支出情况,计算了一系列支出类别的 Kakwani 指数。我们还计算了有无应对策略情况下的灾难性卫生支出。这确定了一个家庭承担的灾难性支付水平以及该人群中灾难性支付的发生率。分析还了解了应对策略(例如储蓄和借款)提供的医疗贫困保护。
相当大比例的受访者在保健方面支出巨大。较低 SES 与较高比例的非正式支付有关。间接卫生支出被发现是(弱)倒退的,因为最贫穷的人更有可能用工资收入来支付医疗费用,而不太贫穷的人更有可能使用储蓄。总体而言,灾难性产妇支出的发生率为 41%,控制应对策略后为 15%。我们没有发现财富五分位数之间灾难性支出发生率有显著差异,也不能得出总支出是倒退的结论。
高支出占家庭资源的比例应该提醒决策者注意这方面产妇支出的负担。非正式支付的差异、显著倒退的间接支出以及用工资或储蓄来为支出提供资金的方式,都突显了最贫困人口承担的更重负担。如果政策目标是在不使家庭陷入更深贫困的情况下增加机构分娩,那么这些不公平现象将需要得到解决。减少自费支付和更好地规范非正式支付应该会直接使最贫困人口受益。或者,旨在帮助最贫困人口应对产妇支出(包括间接支出)的有针对性计划可以减轻高额费用对家庭的影响。