Research Group in Global Health Priorities, Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Department of Research and Development, Helse Bergen Health Trust, Bergen, Norway.
PLoS One. 2019 Feb 12;14(2):e0212129. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212129. eCollection 2019.
Out-of-pocket health expenditures can pose major financial risks, create access-barriers and drive patients and families into poverty. Little is known about physicians' role in financial protection of patients and families at the bedside in low-income settings and how they perceive their roles and duties when treating patients in a health care system requiring high out-of-pocket costs.
Assess physicians' concerns regarding financial welfare of patients and their families and analyze physicians' experiences in reducing catastrophic health expenditures for patients in Ethiopia.
A national survey was conducted among physicians at 49 public hospitals in six regions in Ethiopia. Descriptive statistics were used.
Totally 587 physicians responded (response rate 91%) and 565 filled the inclusion criteria. Health care costs driving people into financial crisis and poverty were witnessed by 82% of respondants, and 88% reported that costs for the patient are important when deciding to use or not use an intervention. Several strategies to save costs for patients were used: 37-79% of physicians were doing this daily or weekly through limiting prescription of drugs, limiting radiologic studies, ultrasound and lab tests, providing second best treatments, and avoiding admission or initiating early discharge. Overall, 75% of the physicians reported that ongoing and future costs to patients influenced their decisions to a greater extent than concerns for preserving hospital resources.
In Ethiopia, a low-income country aiming to move towards universal health coverage, physicians view themselves as both stewards of public resources, patient advocates and financial protectors of patients and their families. Their high concern for family welfare should be acknowledged and the economic and ethical implications of this practice must be further explored.
自付医疗费用可能会带来重大的财务风险,造成就医障碍,并使患者及其家庭陷入贫困。在医疗资源匮乏的环境中,医生在保护患者及其家庭的经济福利方面扮演的角色,以及他们在高自付医疗费用的医疗体系中治疗患者时如何看待自己的角色和职责,这些方面的信息都知之甚少。
评估医生对患者及其家庭经济福利的关注,并分析埃塞俄比亚的医生在降低患者灾难性医疗支出方面的经验。
在埃塞俄比亚六个地区的 49 家公立医院对医生进行了一项全国性调查。使用描述性统计。
共有 587 名医生(响应率 91%)和 565 名符合纳入标准的医生做出回应。82%的受访者见证了医疗保健费用使人们陷入经济危机和贫困,88%的受访者表示,在决定是否使用某项干预措施时,患者的费用是一个重要因素。为患者节省费用采取了几种策略:37-79%的医生每天或每周通过限制药物处方、限制放射学研究、超声和实验室检查、提供次优治疗以及避免住院或提前出院来实施这些策略。总体而言,75%的医生报告称,患者的持续和未来费用比保留医院资源的考虑更能影响他们的决策。
在埃塞俄比亚,作为一个正在努力实现全民健康覆盖的低收入国家,医生认为自己既是公共资源的管理者、患者的权益维护者,也是患者及其家庭的经济保护者。应该承认他们对家庭福利的高度关注,并进一步探讨这种做法的经济和伦理影响。