Okoroh Juliet, Essoun Samuel, Seddoh Anthony, Harris Hobart, Weissman Joel S, Dsane-Selby Lydia, Riviello Robert
Center for Surgery and Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Surgery, Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra, Ghana.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2018 Jun 7;18(1):426. doi: 10.1186/s12913-018-3249-9.
Approximately 150 million people suffer from financial catastrophe annually because of out-of-pocket expenditures (OOPEs) on health. Although the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) of Ghana was designed to promote universal health coverage, OOPEs as a proportion of total health expenditures remains elevated at 26%, exceeding the WHO's recommendations of less than 15-20%. To determine whether enrollment in the NHIS reduces the likelihood of OOPEs and catastrophic health expenditures (CHEs) in Ghana, we undertook a systematic review of the published literature.
We searched for quantitative articles published in English between January 1, 2003 and August 22, 2017 in PubMed, Google Scholar, Economic Literature, Global Health, PAIS International, and African Index Medicus. Two independent authors (J.S.O. & S.E.) reviewed the articles for inclusion, extracted the data, and conducted a quality assessment of the studies. We accepted the World Health Organization definition of catastrophic health expenditures which is out of pocket payments for health care which exceeds 20% of annual house hold income, 10% of household expenditures, or 40% of subsistence expenditures (total household expenditures net food expenditures).
Of the 1094 articles initially identified, 7 were eligible for inclusion. These were cross-sectional household studies published between 2008 and 2016 in Ghana. They demonstrated that the uninsured paid 1.4 to 10 times more in out-of-pocket payments (OOPs) and were more likely to incur CHEs than the insured. Yet, 6 to 18% of insured households made catastrophic payments for healthcare and all studies reported insured members making OOPs for medicines.
Evidence suggests that the national health insurance scheme of Ghana over the last 14 years has made some impact on reducing OOPEs, and yet healthcare costs remain catastrophic for a large proportion of insured households in Ghana. Future studies need to explore reasons for the persistence of OOPs for medicines and services that are covered under the scheme.
每年约有1.5亿人因自付医疗费用而陷入经济困境。尽管加纳的国家健康保险计划(NHIS)旨在促进全民健康覆盖,但自付费用占总医疗支出的比例仍高达26%,超过了世界卫生组织建议的低于15%-20%的水平。为了确定加入NHIS是否能降低加纳自付费用和灾难性医疗支出(CHEs)的可能性,我们对已发表的文献进行了系统综述。
我们在PubMed、谷歌学术、经济文献、全球健康、PAIS国际和非洲医学索引中搜索了2003年1月1日至2017年8月22日期间以英文发表的定量文章。两位独立作者(J.S.O.和S.E.)对文章进行纳入审查、提取数据并对研究进行质量评估。我们采用了世界卫生组织对灾难性医疗支出的定义,即医疗保健的自付费用超过家庭年收入的20%、家庭支出的10%或维持生计支出(家庭总支出减去食品支出)的40%。
在最初识别的1094篇文章中,有7篇符合纳入标准。这些是2008年至2016年期间在加纳发表的横断面家庭研究。研究表明,未参保者的自付费用是参保者的1.4至10倍,且比参保者更有可能发生灾难性医疗支出。然而,6%至18%的参保家庭为医疗保健支付了灾难性费用,所有研究均报告参保成员有药品自付费用。
有证据表明,加纳的国家健康保险计划在过去14年中对减少自付费用产生了一定影响,但对于加纳很大一部分参保家庭来说,医疗费用仍然具有灾难性。未来的研究需要探讨该计划所涵盖的药品和服务仍存在自付费用的原因。