Buigut Steven, Ettarh Remare, Amendah Djesika D
American University in Dubai, School of Business, P.O. Box 28282, Dubai, UAE.
African Population Health Research Center, APHRC Campus, Kirawa Road, P.O. Box 10787-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
Int J Equity Health. 2015 May 14;14:46. doi: 10.1186/s12939-015-0168-9.
In Kenya, where 60 to 80% of the urban residents live in informal settlements (frequently referred to as slums), out-of-pocket (OOP) payments account for more than a third of national health expenditures. However, little is known on the extent to which these OOP payments are associated with personal or household financial catastrophe in the slums. This paper seeks to examine the incidence and determinants of catastrophic health expenditure among urban slum communities in Kenya.
We use a unique dataset on informal settlement residents in Kenya and various approaches that relate households OOP payments for healthcare to total expenditures adjusted for subsistence, or income. We classified households whose OOP was in excess of a predefined threshold as facing catastrophic health expenditures (CHE), and identified the determinants of CHE using multivariate logistic regression analysis.
The results indicate that the proportion of households facing CHE varies widely between 1.52% and 28.38% depending on the method and the threshold used. A core set of variables were found to be key determinants of CHE. The number of working adults in a household and membership in a social safety net appear to reduce the risk of catastrophic expenditure. Conversely, seeking care in a public or private hospital increases the risk of CHE.
This study suggests that a substantial proportion of residents of informal settlements in Kenya face CHE and would likely forgo health care they need but cannot afford. Mechanisms that pool risk and cost (insurance) are needed to protect slum residents from CHE and improve equity in health care access and payment.
在肯尼亚,60%至80%的城市居民居住在非正式住区(常被称为贫民窟),自付费用占国家卫生支出的三分之一以上。然而,对于这些自付费用在多大程度上与贫民窟中的个人或家庭财务灾难相关,人们知之甚少。本文旨在研究肯尼亚城市贫民窟社区灾难性卫生支出的发生率及其决定因素。
我们使用了关于肯尼亚非正式住区居民的独特数据集,以及各种将家庭医疗保健自付费用与经生计或收入调整后的总支出相关联的方法。我们将自付费用超过预先设定阈值的家庭归类为面临灾难性卫生支出(CHE),并使用多变量逻辑回归分析确定CHE的决定因素。
结果表明,根据所使用的方法和阈值,面临CHE的家庭比例在1.52%至28.38%之间差异很大。发现一组核心变量是CHE的关键决定因素。家庭中工作成年人的数量以及社会安全网的成员身份似乎会降低灾难性支出的风险。相反,在公立或私立医院就医会增加CHE的风险。
本研究表明,肯尼亚非正式住区的很大一部分居民面临CHE,可能会放弃他们需要但负担不起的医疗保健。需要风险和成本共担机制(保险)来保护贫民窟居民免受CHE影响,并改善医疗保健获取和支付方面的公平性。