Akazili James, Ataguba John Ele-Ojo, Kanmiki Edmund Wedam, Gyapong John, Sankoh Osman, Oduro Abraham, McIntyre Di
Navrongo Health Research Centre, Ghana Health Service, Box 114, Navrongo, Upper East Region, Ghana.
INDEPTH Network, Kanda, P.O. Box KD 213, Accra, Ghana.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2017 May 22;17(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s12914-017-0121-7.
There is a global concern regarding how households could be protected from relatively large healthcare payments which are a major limitation to accessing healthcare. Such payments also endanger the welfare of households with the potential of moving households into extreme impoverishment. This paper examines the impoverishing effects of out-of-pocket (OOP) healthcare payments in Ghana prior to the introduction of Ghana's national health insurance scheme.
Data come from the Ghana Living Standard Survey 5 (2005/2006). Two poverty lines ($1.25 and $2.50 per capita per day at the 2005 purchasing power parity) are used in assessing the impoverishing effects of OOP healthcare payments. We computed the poverty headcount, poverty gap, normalized poverty gap and normalized mean poverty gap indices using both poverty lines. We examine these indicators at a national level and disaggregated by urban/rural locations, across the three geographical zones, and across the ten administrative regions in Ghana. Also the Pen's parade of "dwarfs and a few giants" is used to illustrate the decreasing welfare effects of OOP healthcare payments in Ghana.
There was a high incidence and intensity of impoverishment due to OOP healthcare payments in Ghana. These payments contributed to a relative increase in poverty headcount by 9.4 and 3.8% using the $1.25/day and $2.5/day poverty lines, respectively. The relative poverty gap index was estimated at 42.7 and 10.5% respectively for the lower and upper poverty lines. Relative normalized mean poverty gap was estimated at 30.5 and 6.4%, respectively, for the lower and upper poverty lines. The percentage increase in poverty associated with OOP healthcare payments in Ghana is highest among households in the middle zone with an absolute increase estimated at 2.3% compared to the coastal and northern zones.
It is clear from the findings that without financial risk protection, households can be pushed into poverty due to OOP healthcare payments. Even relatively richer households are impoverished by OOP healthcare payments. This paper presents baseline indicators for evaluating the impact of Ghana's national health insurance scheme on impoverishment due to OOP healthcare payments.
全球都在关注如何保护家庭免受数额相对较大的医疗费用影响,这些费用是获取医疗服务的主要限制因素。此类费用还危及家庭福利,有可能使家庭陷入极端贫困。本文考察了加纳国家医疗保险计划实施之前,自付医疗费用对贫困的影响。
数据来自《加纳生活水平调查5》(2005/2006)。采用两条贫困线(按2005年购买力平价计算,人均每天1.25美元和2.50美元)来评估自付医疗费用的贫困影响。我们使用这两条贫困线计算了贫困人口比例、贫困差距、标准化贫困差距和标准化平均贫困差距指数。我们在国家层面以及按城乡地点、三个地理区域和加纳的十个行政区进行了分类,考察了这些指标。此外,还用“侏儒与少数巨人”的彭氏排列来说明加纳自付医疗费用对福利的递减影响。
在加纳,自付医疗费用导致贫困发生率和贫困程度都很高。使用每天1.25美元和2.5美元的贫困线,这些费用分别使贫困人口比例相对增加了9.4%和3.8%。较低和较高贫困线的相对贫困差距指数分别估计为42.7%和10.5%。较低和较高贫困线的相对标准化平均贫困差距分别估计为30.5%和6.4%。加纳与自付医疗费用相关的贫困增加百分比在中部地区的家庭中最高,与沿海和北部地区相比,绝对增加估计为2.3%。
从研究结果可以清楚地看出,如果没有财务风险保护,自付医疗费用会使家庭陷入贫困。即使是相对富裕的家庭也会因自付医疗费用而陷入贫困。本文提供了基线指标,用于评估加纳国家医疗保险计划对自付医疗费用导致的贫困的影响。