First Nations Health Authority, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, Brock University, St. Catherines, Ontario, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Nov 19;21(1):1252. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-07272-9.
Sepsis disproportionately affects children from socioeconomically disadvantaged families in low-resource settings, where care seeking may consume scarce family resources and lead to financial hardships. Those financial hardships may, in turn, contribute to late presentation or failure to seek care and result in high mortality during hospitalization and during the post discharge period, a period of increasingly recognized vulnerability. The purpose of this study is to explore the out-of-pocket costs related to sepsis hospitalizations and post-discharge care among children admitted with sepsis in Uganda.
This mixed-methods study was comprised of focus group discussions (FGD) with caregivers of children admitted for sepsis, which then informed a quantitative cross-sectional household survey to measure out-of-pocket costs of sepsis care both during initial admission and during the post-discharge period. All participants were families of children enrolled in a concurrent sepsis study.
Three FGD with mothers (n = 20) and one FGD with fathers (n = 7) were conducted. Three primary themes that emerged included (1) financial losses, (2) time and productivity losses and (3) coping with costs. A subsequently developed cross-sectional survey was completed for 153 households of children discharged following admission for sepsis. The survey revealed a high cost of care for families attending both private and public facilities, although out-of-pocket cost were higher at private facilities. Half of those surveyed reported loss of income during hospitalization and a third sold household assets, most often livestock, to cover costs. Total mean out-of-pocket costs of hospital care and post-discharge care were 124.50 USD and 44.60 USD respectively for those seeking initial care at private facilities and 62.10 USD and 14.60 USD at public facilities, a high sum in a country with widespread poverty.
This study reveals that families incur a substantial economic burden in accessing care for children with sepsis.
在资源匮乏的环境中,社会经济地位较低的家庭的儿童更容易受到败血症的影响,而在这些家庭中,寻求医疗可能会消耗稀缺的家庭资源,并导致经济困难。这些经济困难反过来可能导致就诊延迟或无法寻求医疗服务,导致住院期间和出院后期间死亡率高,而这一期间的脆弱性日益受到关注。本研究旨在探讨乌干达败血症住院患儿及其出院后护理的自付费用。
本混合方法研究包括对因败血症住院的患儿照顾者进行焦点小组讨论(FGD),然后进行一项横断面家庭调查,以衡量败血症治疗的自付费用,包括初始住院期间和出院后期间。所有参与者均为同时进行的败血症研究中儿童的家庭。
进行了三次母亲 FGD(n=20)和一次父亲 FGD(n=7)。出现了三个主要主题,包括(1)经济损失,(2)时间和生产力损失,(3)应对成本。随后开发了一项针对 153 户因败血症住院后出院的儿童家庭的横断面调查。调查显示,参加私立和公立医院的家庭医疗费用都很高,尽管私立医院的自付费用更高。接受调查的一半人报告在住院期间收入损失,三分之一人出售家庭资产,最常见的是牲畜,以支付费用。在这个普遍贫困的国家,那些最初在私立机构接受治疗的人,其住院和出院后护理的总自付费用分别为 124.50 美元和 44.60 美元,而在公立机构接受治疗的人,其总自付费用分别为 62.10 美元和 14.60 美元。
本研究表明,家庭为获得败血症儿童的治疗而承担了巨大的经济负担。