Amaya-Lara Jeannette Liliana
Instituto de Salud Pública, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogotá, Colombia.
Int J Equity Health. 2016 Nov 10;15(1):182. doi: 10.1186/s12939-016-0472-z.
Out-of-pocket expenditure to pay for health services could result in financial catastrophe. The purpose of this study was to identify the incidence and determinants of catastrophic out-of-pocket payments for healthcare in Colombia. The underlying hypotheses are that low-income and non-insured population in Colombia, and households living in isolated and high level of rurality regions, are more likely to incur catastrophic healthcare expenses.
This study used data from the Quality of Life National Survey conducted in Colombia in 2011. The presence of catastrophic healthcare spending was calculated using the methodology proposed by the World Health Organization in 2005. Households were classified as having catastrophic health spending when their out-of-pocket health payments were over 20 % of their payment capacity. All other households were classified as not having catastrophic health spending. A probit model was estimated aimed at determining what factors influence the probability of catastrophic healthcare spending.
Study findings show that 9.6 % of Colombian households had catastrophic expenditure. The incidence was higher in households in the Pacífica and Atlántica regions, extended and nuclear families, households with children or elderly adults, located in rural areas, and not insured under the healthcare system. The ratio of household members who work seems to reduce the risk of catastrophic healthcare spending, but the occurrence of any in-patient event increases it. So, there is no statistical evidence for rejecting the hypotheses under study.
Results indicate the importance of establishing intervention mechanisms in order to improve equity in access and payment for health care, protect vulnerable groups against financial risk, and, consequently, reduce the incidence of catastrophic healthcare spending. For this, it is essential to achieve universal health coverage through standardized and improved health services packages for vulnerable age groups and implement healthcare campaigns for households in rural areas where the incidence of out-of-pocket payments is higher.
自掏腰包支付医疗服务费用可能导致经济灾难。本研究的目的是确定哥伦比亚医疗保健灾难性自付费用的发生率及其决定因素。基本假设是,哥伦比亚的低收入和未参保人群,以及生活在偏远和农村程度高的地区的家庭,更有可能产生灾难性医疗费用。
本研究使用了2011年在哥伦比亚进行的全国生活质量调查的数据。采用世界卫生组织2005年提出的方法计算灾难性医疗支出的存在情况。当家庭的自付医疗费用超过其支付能力的20%时,这些家庭被归类为有灾难性医疗支出。所有其他家庭被归类为没有灾难性医疗支出。估计了一个概率模型,旨在确定哪些因素会影响灾难性医疗支出的可能性。
研究结果表明,9.6%的哥伦比亚家庭有灾难性支出。在太平洋和大西洋地区的家庭、大家庭和核心家庭、有儿童或老年人的家庭、农村地区的家庭以及未参加医疗保健系统保险的家庭中,发生率更高。工作家庭成员的比例似乎会降低灾难性医疗支出的风险,但任何住院事件的发生都会增加这种风险。因此,没有统计证据拒绝所研究的假设。
结果表明,建立干预机制对于提高医疗保健获取和支付的公平性、保护弱势群体免受经济风险影响以及因此降低灾难性医疗支出的发生率至关重要。为此,必须通过为弱势群体提供标准化和改进的医疗服务包来实现全民健康覆盖,并对自付费用发生率较高的农村地区家庭开展医疗保健宣传活动。