Cardiovascular Disease and Its Implication for Higher Catastrophic Health Expenditures Among Households in Sub-Saharan Africa.

IF 2.3 Q2 ECONOMICS Journal of Health Economics and Outcomes Research Pub Date : 2023-03-17 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.36469/001c.70252
Folashayo Ikenna Peter Adeniji, Taiwo Akinyode Obembe
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Abstract

Background: Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) impose an enormous and growing economic burden on households in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Like many chronic health conditions, CVD predisposes families to catastrophic health expenditure (CHE), especially in SSA due to the low health insurance coverage. This study assessed the impact of CVD on the risks of incurring higher CHE among households in Ghana and South Africa. Methods: The World Health Organization (WHO) Study on Global AGEing and Adult Health (WHO SAGE), Wave 1, implemented 2007-2010, was utilized. Following standard procedure, CHE was defined as the health expenditure above 5%, 10%, and 25% of total household expenditure. Similarly, a 40% threshold was applied to household total nonfood expenditure, also referred to as the capacity to pay. To compare the difference in mean CHE by household CVD status and the predictors of CHE, Student's t-test and logistic regression were utilized. Results: The share of medical expenditure in total household spending was higher among households with CVD in Ghana and South Africa. Households with CVD were more likely to experience greater CHE across all the thresholds in Ghana. Households who reported having CVD were twice as likely to incur CHE at 5% threshold (odds ratio [OR], 1.946; confidence interval [CI], 0.965-1.095), 3 times as likely at 10% threshold (OR, 2.710; CI, 1.401-5.239), and 4 times more likely to experience CHE at both 25% and 40% thresholds, (OR, 3.696; CI, 0.956-14.286) and (OR, 4.107; CI, 1.908-8.841), respectively. In South Africa, households with CVD experienced higher CHE across all the thresholds examined compared with households without CVDs. However, only household CVD status, household health insurance status, and the presence of other disease conditions apart from CVD were associated with incurring CHE. Households who reported having CVD were 3 times more likely to incur CHE compared with households without CVD (OR, 3.002; CI, 1.013-8.902). Conclusions: Our findings suggest that CVD predisposed households to risk of higher CHE. Equity in health financing presupposes that access to health insurance should be predicated on individual health needs. Thus, targeting and prioritizing the health needs of individuals with regard to healthcare financing interventions in SSA is needed.

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心血管疾病及其对撒哈拉以南非洲家庭较高灾难性卫生支出的影响。
背景:心血管疾病(cvd)给撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)的家庭带来了巨大且日益增长的经济负担。像许多慢性疾病一样,心血管疾病使家庭容易发生灾难性的医疗支出(CHE),特别是在SSA,因为医疗保险覆盖率低。本研究评估了心血管疾病对加纳和南非家庭发生较高CHE风险的影响。方法:采用2007-2010年实施的世界卫生组织(WHO)全球老龄化与成人健康研究(WHO SAGE)第1期。按照标准程序,卫生保健支出被定义为超过家庭总支出的5%、10%和25%。同样,40%的门槛适用于家庭非食品总支出,也称为支付能力。为了比较家庭心血管疾病状况与CHE预测因子的平均CHE差异,采用学生t检验和logistic回归。结果:加纳和南非患有心血管疾病的家庭医疗支出占家庭总支出的比例较高。在加纳,患有心血管疾病的家庭更有可能经历更高的CHE。在5%的阈值下,报告患有心血管疾病的家庭发生心血管疾病的可能性是其他家庭的两倍(优势比[OR], 1.946;置信区间[CI], 0.965-1.095), 10%阈值的可能性为3倍(OR, 2.710;CI, 1.401-5.239),并且在25%和40%阈值时经历CHE的可能性增加了4倍(OR, 3.696;CI, 0.956-14.286)和(OR, 4.107;CI分别为1.908-8.841)。在南非,与没有心血管疾病的家庭相比,患有心血管疾病的家庭在所有检查阈值中的CHE都更高。然而,只有家庭心血管疾病状况、家庭健康保险状况以及除心血管疾病外的其他疾病状况与发生CHE相关。报告患有心血管疾病的家庭比没有心血管疾病的家庭发生CHE的可能性高3倍(OR, 3.002;CI, 1.013 - -8.902)。结论:我们的研究结果表明,心血管疾病使家庭易患较高的CHE风险。卫生筹资公平的先决条件是,获得医疗保险的机会应以个人健康需求为基础。因此,在SSA的保健筹资干预方面,有必要针对个人的保健需求并确定其优先次序。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
55
审稿时长
10 weeks
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