Barasa Edwine W, Maina Thomas, Ravishankar Nirmala
Health Economics Research Unit, KEMRI Wellcome Trust Research Programme, P.O Box 43640-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
Nuffield department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Int J Equity Health. 2017 Feb 6;16(1):31. doi: 10.1186/s12939-017-0526-x.
Monitoring the incidence and intensity of catastrophic health expenditure, as well as the impoverishing effects of out of pocket costs to access healthcare, is a key part of benchmarking Kenya's progress towards reducing the financial burden that households experience when accessing healthcare.
The study relies on data from the nationally-representative Kenya Household Expenditure and Utilization Survey conducted in 2013 (n =33,675). We undertook health equity analysis to estimate the incidence and intensity of catastrophic expenditure. Households were considered to have incurred catastrophic expenditures if their annual out of-pocket health expenditures exceeded 40% of their annual non-food expenditure. We assessed the impoverishing effects of out of pocket payments using the Kenya national poverty line. We distinguished between direct payments for healthcare such as payments for consultation, medicines, medical procedures, and total healthcare expenditure that includes direct healthcare payments and the cost of transportation to and from health facilities. We used logistic regression analysis to explore the factors associated with the incidence of catastrophic expenditures.
When only direct payments to healthcare providers were considered, the incidence of catastrophic expenditures was 4.52%. When transport costs are included, the incidence of catastrophic expenditure increased to 6.58%. 453,470 Kenyans are pushed into poverty annually as a result of direct payments for healthcare. When the cost of transport is included, that number increases by more than one third to 619,541. Unemployment of the household head, presence of an elderly person, a person with a chronic ailment, a large household size, lower household social-economic status, and residence in marginalized regions of the country are significantly associated with increased odds of incurring catastrophic expenditures.
Kenyan policy makers should prioritize extending pre-payment mechanisms to more vulnerable groups, specifically the poor, the elderly, those suffering from chronic ailments and those living in marginalized regions of the country. The range of services covered under these mechanisms should also be extended such that the proportion of direct costs paid to access care is reduced. Policy makers should also prioritize reducing supply side bottlenecks such as availability of healthcare facilities in close proximity to the population, especially in rural and marginalized areas, and improvements in quality of care. For the poor and the vulnerable, initiatives to cover the cost of transport to and from a health facility, such as transport vouchers could also be explored.
监测灾难性卫生支出的发生率和强度,以及自费医疗费用对家庭造成的贫困影响,是衡量肯尼亚在减轻家庭就医时所承受的经济负担方面取得进展的关键部分。
该研究依赖于2013年进行的具有全国代表性的肯尼亚家庭支出与利用情况调查数据(n = 33,675)。我们进行了卫生公平性分析,以估计灾难性支出的发生率和强度。如果家庭的年度自费医疗支出超过其年度非食品支出的40%,则被视为发生了灾难性支出。我们使用肯尼亚国家贫困线评估自费支付的贫困影响。我们区分了医疗保健的直接支付,如诊疗费、药费、医疗程序费用,以及包括直接医疗支付和往返医疗机构交通费用在内的总医疗支出。我们使用逻辑回归分析来探究与灾难性支出发生率相关的因素。
仅考虑向医疗服务提供者的直接支付时,灾难性支出的发生率为4.52%。若将交通费用包括在内,灾难性支出的发生率增至6.58%。每年有453,470名肯尼亚人因医疗保健的直接支付而陷入贫困。若将交通费用包括在内,这一数字增加三分之一以上,达到619,541人。户主失业、有老年人、有慢性病患者、家庭规模大、家庭社会经济地位较低以及居住在该国边缘化地区,与发生灾难性支出的几率增加显著相关。
肯尼亚政策制定者应优先将预付机制扩大到更脆弱群体,特别是穷人、老年人、慢性病患者以及居住在该国边缘化地区的人群。这些机制涵盖的服务范围也应扩大,以减少获得医疗服务时直接支付费用的比例。政策制定者还应优先减少供应方瓶颈,如在人口附近,特别是农村和边缘化地区提供医疗设施,并提高医疗质量。对于穷人和弱势群体,也可探索诸如交通代金券等举措,以支付往返医疗机构的交通费用。