Protecting Households From Catastrophic Health Spending
Top Cited Papers
- 1 July 2007
- journal article
- Published by Health Affairs (Project Hope) in Health Affairs
- Vol. 26 (4) , 972-983
- https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.26.4.972
Abstract
Many countries rely heavily on patients' out-of-pocket payments to providers to finance their health care systems. This prevents some people from seeking care and results in financial catastrophe and impoverishment for others who do obtain care. Surveys in eighty-nine countries covering 89 percent of the world's population suggest that 150 million people globally suffer financial catastrophe annually because they pay for health services. Prepayment mechanisms protect people from financial catastrophe, but there is no strong evidence that social health insurance systems offer better or worse protection than tax-based systems do.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Revolution that Faltered: Two Decades of Reform of Australia's Retirement Income SystemInternational Social Security Review, 2005
- Understanding the impact of eliminating user fees: Utilization and catastrophic health expenditures in UgandaSocial Science & Medicine, 2005
- Inequities in healthcare seeking in the treatment of communicable endemic diseases in Southeast NigeriaSocial Science & Medicine, 2005
- Illness And Injury As Contributors To BankruptcyHealth Affairs, 2005
- Is there a case for social insurance?Health Policy and Planning, 2004
- Catastrophe and impoverishment in paying for health care: with applications to Vietnam 1993–1998Health Economics, 2003
- A descriptive framework for country-level analysis of health care financing arrangementsHealth Policy, 2001
- A Look at Catastrophic Medical Expenses and the PoorHealth Affairs, 1986