Economic Policy Research Centre (EPRC), Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2020 Dec;18(6):781-788. doi: 10.1007/s40258-020-00609-1.
Out of pocket (OOP) payments for healthcare remain a significant health financing challenge in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Understanding the drivers and impacts of this financial health burden is both an economic and a public health priority.
This study examines how the burden of OOP health expenditures varies with different thresholds for financial catastrophe.
The analysis is based on Livings Standards Measurement Surveys (LSMS)-Integrated Surveys on Agriculture (ISA) for five SSA countries-Ethiopia, Malawi, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda. We estimate the degree by which OOP payments as share of total household non-food expenditures exceed either the 15 or 25% threshold.
For the countries considered, the severity of OOP payments is substantial-the average positive overshoot (beyond the 25% threshold) is above 10%, except for Nigeria. This reflects a higher percentage of OOP in total household health expenditures-compared to taxes and contributions-especially among the poor in these specific countries. Regarding sensitivity of distribution of catastrophic health expenditures, we find that households with low non-food expenditures are more likely to incur catastrophic payments with the exception for Uganda where catastrophic payments increase with the increase of non-food household expenditures.
The burden of catastrophic health expenditures remains large. In order to reduce this burden, public health expenditures need to be expanded as an alternative. This calls for renewed attention to expand public revenues as the most sustainable methods of financing health expenditures in Africa.
在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA),医疗保健自费支出仍然是一个重大的卫生融资挑战。了解这种金融健康负担的驱动因素和影响既是经济问题,也是公共卫生重点。
本研究考察了自费卫生支出负担随不同财务灾难阈值的变化情况。
该分析基于五个 SSA 国家(埃塞俄比亚、马拉维、尼日利亚、坦桑尼亚和乌干达)的生活水平衡量调查(LSMS)-农业综合调查(ISA)。我们估计 OOP 支付占家庭非食品总支出的比例超过 15%或 25%阈值的程度。
就所考虑的国家而言,自费支付的严重程度很大-平均正超支(超过 25%的阈值)超过 10%,尼日利亚除外。这反映了自费在这些特定国家的家庭总卫生支出中所占的比例较高-与税收和缴款相比-尤其是在贫困家庭中。关于灾难性卫生支出分布的敏感性,我们发现,除乌干达外,非食品支出较低的家庭更有可能发生灾难性支付,而乌干达的情况则相反,随着非食品家庭支出的增加,灾难性支付也会增加。
灾难性卫生支出的负担仍然很大。为了减轻这种负担,需要扩大公共卫生支出作为替代方案。这需要重新关注扩大公共收入,因为这是非洲卫生支出融资的最可持续方法。