Coping with out-of-pocket health payments: empirical evidence from 15 African countries
Top Cited Papers
- 1 November 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by WHO Press in Bulletin of the World Health Organization
- Vol. 86 (11) , 849-856
- https://doi.org/10.2471/blt.07.049403
Abstract
To explore factors associated with household coping behaviours in the face of health expenditures in 15 African countries and provide evidence for policy-makers in designing financial health protection mechanisms. A series of logit regressions were performed to explore factors correlating with a greater likelihood of selling assets, borrowing or both to finance health care. The average partial effects for different levels of spending on inpatient care were derived by computing the partial effects for each observation and taking the average across the sample. Data used in the analysis were from the 2002–2003 World Health Survey, which asked how households had financed out-of-pocket payments over the previous year. Households selling assets or borrowing money were compared to those that financed health care from income or savings. Those that used insurance were excluded. For the analysis, a value of 1 was assigned to selling assets or borrowing money and a value of 0 to other coping mechanisms. Coping through borrowing and selling assets ranged from 23% of households in Zambia to 68% in Burkina Faso. In general, the highest income groups were less likely to borrow and sell assets, but coping mechanisms did not differ strongly among lower income quintiles. Households with higher inpatient expenses were significantly more likely to borrow and deplete assets compared to those financing outpatient care or routine medical expenses, except in Burkina Faso, Namibia and Swaziland. In eight countries, the coefficient on the highest quintile of inpatient spending had a P-value below 0.01. In most African countries, the health financing system is too weak to protect households from health shocks. Borrowing and selling assets to finance health care are common. Formal prepayment schemes could benefit many households, and an overall social protection network could help to mitigate the long-term effects of ill health on household well-being and support poverty reduction.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do microfinance programs help families insure consumption against illness?Health Economics, 2008
- Coping with health‐care costs: implications for the measurement of catastrophic expenditures and povertyHealth Economics, 2008
- Who pays for health care in Asia?Journal of Health Economics, 2007
- The Economic Lives of the PoorJournal of Economic Perspectives, 2007
- The economic consequences of health shocks: Evidence from VietnamJournal of Health Economics, 2007
- Catastrophe and impoverishment in paying for health care: with applications to Vietnam 1993–1998Health Economics, 2003
- Effectiveness of community health financing in meeting the cost of illness.2002
- Coping with ill health in a rickshaw puller's household in Chittagong, Bangladesh.1999
- Ability to pay for health care: concepts and evidenceHealth Policy and Planning, 1996
- Household strategies to cope with the economic costs of illnessSocial Science & Medicine, 1996