Lyles By Emily, Chua Stephen, Barham Yasmeen, Pfieffer-Mundt Kayla, Spiegel Paul, Burton Ann, Doocy Shannon
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street Suite E8132, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Medair, Amman, Jordan.
Confl Health. 2021 May 25;15(1):41. doi: 10.1186/s13031-021-00380-7.
Cash transfers are an increasingly common intervention in the Syrian refugee response to meet basic needs, though there is little known of their potential secondary impact on health outcomes in humanitarian settings.
A quasi-experimental prospective cohort study was implemented from October 2018 through January 2020 to assess the effectiveness of multi-purpose cash (MPC), community health volunteer (CHV)-led education, combined with conditional cash transfers (CCT) with respect to health measures among Syrian refugees with type II diabetes in Jordan.
CHV + CCT participants had the highest expenditures at endline and were the only group with statistically significant increases in payments for outpatient diabetes care (25.3%, P < 0.001) and monthly medication costs (13.6%, P < 0.001). Conversely, monthly spending on diabetes medication decreased significantly in the CHV only group (- 18.7%, P = 0.001) yet increased in the MPC and CHV + CCT groups. Expenditures on glucose monitoring increased in all groups but significantly more in the CHV + CCT group (39.2%, P < 0.001). The proportion of participants reporting regular diabetes care visits increased significantly only in the CHV + CCT group (15.1%, P = 0.002). Specialist visits also increased among CHV + CCT participants (16.8%, P = 0.001), but decreased in CHV only participants (- 27.8%, P < 0.001). Decreases in cost-motivated provider selection (- 22.8%, P < 0.001) and not receiving all needed care because of cost (- 26.2%, P < 0.001) were significant only in the CHV + CCT group. A small significant decrease in BMI was observed in the CHV + CCT group (- 1.0, P = 0.005). Decreases in HbA1C were significant in all groups with magnitudes ranging from - 0.2 to - 0.7%. The proportion of CHV + CCT participants with normal blood pressure increased significantly from baseline to endline by 11.3% (P = 0.007).
Combined conditional cash and health education were effective in improving expenditures, health service utilization, medication adherence, blood pressure, and diabetes control. The lower cost health education intervention was similarly effective in improving diabetes control, whereas unconditional cash transfers alone were least effective. Study findings suggest that conditional cash or combined cash and health education are promising strategies to support diabetes control among refugees and that where the purpose of MPC is to improve health outcomes, this alone is insufficient to achieve improvements in the health of refugees with diabetes.
现金转移支付在叙利亚难民应对行动中日益成为一种常见的干预措施,以满足基本需求,然而,对于其在人道主义环境中对健康结果的潜在次生影响却知之甚少。
2018年10月至2020年1月实施了一项准实验性前瞻性队列研究,以评估多用途现金(MPC)、社区卫生志愿者(CHV)主导的教育以及约旦境内患有II型糖尿病的叙利亚难民的有条件现金转移支付(CCT)在健康措施方面的有效性。
CHV + CCT参与者在随访结束时支出最高,并且是唯一在门诊糖尿病护理费用(25.3%,P < 0.001)和每月药物费用(13.6%,P < 0.001)方面有统计学显著增加的组。相反,仅CHV组的糖尿病药物每月支出显著下降(-18.7%,P = 0.001),而MPC组和CHV + CCT组则增加。所有组的血糖监测支出均增加,但CHV + CCT组增加得更为显著(39.2%,P < 0.001)。仅CHV + CCT组中报告定期进行糖尿病护理就诊的参与者比例显著增加(15.1%,P = 0.002)。CHV + CCT参与者的专科就诊也有所增加(16.8%,P = 0.001),但仅CHV参与者的专科就诊减少(-27.8%,P < 0.001)。仅在CHV + CCT组中,因费用原因选择医疗服务提供者的情况显著减少(-22.8%,P < 0.001)以及因费用未获得所有所需护理的情况显著减少(-26.2%,P < 0.001)。在CHV + CCT组中观察到BMI有小幅显著下降(-1.0,P = 0.005)。所有组的糖化血红蛋白均有显著下降,幅度在-0.2%至-0.7%之间。从基线到随访结束,CHV + CCT参与者中血压正常的比例显著增加了11.3%(P = 0.007)。
有条件现金与健康教育相结合在改善支出、卫生服务利用、药物依从性、血压和糖尿病控制方面是有效的。成本较低的健康教育干预在改善糖尿病控制方面同样有效,而仅无条件现金转移支付效果最差。研究结果表明,有条件现金或现金与健康教育相结合是支持难民糖尿病控制的有前景的策略,并且在MPC的目的是改善健康结果的情况下,仅靠这一点不足以实现患有糖尿病的难民健康状况的改善。