Determining factors of catastrophic health spending in Bogota, Colombia.

Jeannette Liliana Amaya Lara, Fernando Ruiz Gómez
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引用次数: 43

Abstract

This study tests whether the low-income population in Bogota not insured under the General Social Security Health System is able to economically handle unexpected health problems or not. It used data from the Health Services Use and Expenditure Study conducted in Colombia in 2001, for which each household recorded its monthly out-of-pocket health expenditure during the year and the household income was measured as the sum of each member's contribution to the household. Payment capacity or available income and catastrophic health spending were based on the latest methodology proposed by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2005. A probit model was adjusted to determine the factors that significantly influence the likelihood of a household having catastrophic health spending. The percentage of households with catastrophic health spending in Bogota was 4.9%; incidence was higher in low-income households where none of the members were affiliated to social security, where there had been an in-patient event, and where the heads of household were over 60 years of age. There is no statistical evidence for rejecting the hypothesis under study, which states that low-income households that have no health insurance are more likely to have catastrophic health spending than higher-income households with health insurance.

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哥伦比亚波哥大灾难性卫生支出的决定因素。
本研究测试波哥大低收入人口是否有能力经济地处理意外的健康问题。它使用了2001年在哥伦比亚进行的保健服务使用和支出研究的数据,其中每个家庭都记录了这一年中每月的自付保健支出,并以每个成员对家庭的缴款总和来衡量家庭收入。支付能力或可用收入和灾难性卫生支出是根据世界卫生组织(世卫组织)2005年提出的最新方法计算的。对概率模型进行了调整,以确定显著影响家庭灾难性医疗支出可能性的因素。波哥大出现灾难性卫生支出的家庭比例为4.9%;低收入家庭的发病率较高,因为这些家庭的成员都不参加社会保障、曾发生过住院事件、户主年龄超过60岁。没有统计证据可以否定研究中的假设,即没有医疗保险的低收入家庭比有医疗保险的高收入家庭更有可能出现灾难性的医疗支出。
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