Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Public Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 May;277:113875. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.113875. Epub 2021 Mar 27.
Financial barriers are a key limitation to accessing health services, such as tuberculosis (TB) care in resource-poor settings. In Ghana, the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), established in 2003, officially offers free TB care to those enrolled. Using data from the first Ghana's national TB patient cost survey, we address two key questions 1) what are the key determinants of costs and affordability for TB-affected households, and 2) what would be the impact on costs for TB-affected households of expanding NHIS to all TB patients? We reported the level of direct and indirect costs, the proportion of TB-affected households experiencing catastrophic costs (defined as total TB-related costs, i.e., direct and indirect, exceeding 20% of their estimated pre-diagnosis annual household income), and potential determinants of costs, stratified by insurance status. Regression models were used to determine drivers of costs and affordability. The effect of enrolment into NHIS on costs was investigated through Inverse Probability of Treatment Weighting Analysis. Higher levels of education and income, a bigger household size and an multi-drug resistant TB diagnosis were associated with higher direct costs. Being in a low wealth quintile, living in an urban setting, losing one's job and having MDR-TB increased the odds of experiencing catastrophic costs. There was no evidence to suggest that enrolment in NHIS defrayed medical, non-medical, or total costs, nor mitigated income loss. Even if we expanded NHIS to all TB patients, the analyses suggest no evidence for any impact of insurance on medical cost, income loss, or total cost. An expansion of the NHIS programme will not relieve the financial burden for TB-affected households. Social protection schemes require enhancement if they are to protect TB patients from financial catastrophe.
经济障碍是获取卫生服务的主要限制因素之一,例如在资源匮乏的环境中获得结核病(TB)治疗。在加纳,国家健康保险计划(NHIS)于 2003 年成立,正式为参保人员提供免费的结核病治疗。利用加纳首次全国结核病患者费用调查的数据,我们回答了两个关键问题:1)结核病患者家庭的费用和负担能力的主要决定因素是什么;2)将 NHIS 扩大到所有结核病患者对结核病患者家庭的费用会有什么影响?我们报告了直接和间接费用的水平、因结核病而陷入灾难性费用的家庭比例(定义为与结核病相关的全部费用,即直接和间接费用,超过其估计的诊断前年度家庭收入的 20%)以及按保险状况分层的费用的潜在决定因素。回归模型用于确定费用和负担能力的驱动因素。通过逆概率处理加权分析(Inverse Probability of Treatment Weighting Analysis)来研究 NHIS 参保对费用的影响。更高的教育和收入水平、更大的家庭规模和耐多药结核病诊断与更高的直接费用相关。处于低财富五分位数、居住在城市地区、失业和患有耐多药结核病增加了经历灾难性费用的可能性。没有证据表明 NHIS 参保可以抵消医疗、非医疗或全部费用,也无法减轻收入损失。即使我们将 NHIS 扩大到所有结核病患者,分析也表明保险对医疗费用、收入损失或总费用都没有任何影响。NHIS 计划的扩大不会减轻结核病患者家庭的经济负担。如果要保护结核病患者免受经济灾难,社会保护计划需要加强。