Paying for hospital-based care of Kala-azar in Nepal: assessing catastrophic, impoverishment and economic consequences

Households obtaining health care services in developing countries incur substantial costs, despite services generally being provided free of charge by public health institutions. This constitutes an economic burden on low-income households, and contributes to deepening their level of poverty. In add...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health policy and planning 2009-03, Vol.24 (2), p.129-139
Hauptverfasser: Adhikari, Shiva R, Maskay, Nephil M, Sharma, Bishnu P
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container_title Health policy and planning
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creator Adhikari, Shiva R
Maskay, Nephil M
Sharma, Bishnu P
description Households obtaining health care services in developing countries incur substantial costs, despite services generally being provided free of charge by public health institutions. This constitutes an economic burden on low-income households, and contributes to deepening their level of poverty. In addition to the economic burden of obtaining health care, the method of financing these payments has implications for the distribution of household assets. This effect on resource-poor households is amplified since they have decreased access to health insurance. Recent literature, however, ignores the importance of the method of financing health care payments. This paper looks at the case of Nepal and highlights the impact on households of paying for hospital-based care of Kala-azar (KA) by analysing the catastrophic, impoverishment and economic consequences of their coping strategies. The paper utilizes micro-data on a random selection of 50% of the KA-affected households of Siraha and Saptari districts of Nepal. The empirical results suggest that direct costs of hospital-based treatment of KA are catastrophic since they consume 17% of annual household income. This expenditure causes more than 20% of KA-affected households to fall below the poverty line, with the remaining households being pushed into the category of marginal poor; the poverty gap ratio is more than 90%. Further, KA incidence can have prolonged and severe economic consequences for the household economy due to the mechanisms of informal sector financing to which households resort. A heavy burden of loan repayments can lead households on a downward spiral that eventually becomes a poverty trap. In other words, the method of financing health care payments is an important ingredient in understanding the economic burden of disease.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/heapol/czn052
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This expenditure causes more than 20% of KA-affected households to fall below the poverty line, with the remaining households being pushed into the category of marginal poor; the poverty gap ratio is more than 90%. Further, KA incidence can have prolonged and severe economic consequences for the household economy due to the mechanisms of informal sector financing to which households resort. A heavy burden of loan repayments can lead households on a downward spiral that eventually becomes a poverty trap. In other words, the method of financing health care payments is an important ingredient in understanding the economic burden of disease.</abstract><cop>England</cop><pub>Oxford University Press</pub><pmid>19181674</pmid><doi>10.1093/heapol/czn052</doi><tpages>11</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Access to health care
Antigens
catastrophic
Catastrophic Illness - economics
Cost of Illness
Costs
Developing countries
Direct Service Costs
Disease
economic consequences
Economic policy
Episode of Care
Expenditures
Family Characteristics
Family income
Financing, Personal
Health administration
Health care
health care payment
Health care policy
Health economics
Health expenditure
Health Expenditures - statistics & numerical data
Health inequality
Health policy
Health Services Accessibility - economics
Healthcare Disparities - economics
Hospital Charges
Hospitalization - economics
Hospitals
Households
Humans
Informal economy
Kala-azar
LDCs
Leishmaniasis, Visceral - economics
Leishmaniasis, Visceral - therapy
loan repayment
Low income groups
Malaria
Models, Econometric
Nepal
Original articles
Poor
Poverty
Poverty - statistics & numerical data
Poverty - trends
Public health
Studies
Tropical diseases
title Paying for hospital-based care of Kala-azar in Nepal: assessing catastrophic, impoverishment and economic consequences
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