Experiences and impacts of out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure on remote Aboriginal families.

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
ACS Applied Bio Materials Pub Date : 2024-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-26 DOI:10.22605/RRH8328
Courtney Ryder, Shane D'Angelo, Patrick Sharpe, Tamara Mackean, Nayia Cominos, Julieann Coombes, Keziah Bennett-Brook, Darryl Cameron, Emily Gloede, Shahid Ullah, Jacqueline Stephens
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Abstract

Introduction: Aboriginal Australians face significant health disparities, with hospitalisation rates 2.3 times greater, and longer hospital length of stay, than non-Indigenous Australians. This additional burden impacts families further through out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure (OOPHE), which includes additional healthcare expenses not covered by universal taxpayer insurance. Aboriginal patients traveling from remote locations are likely to be impacted further by OOPHE. The objective of this study was to examine the impacts and burden of OOPHE for rurally based Aboriginal individuals.

Methods: Participants were recruited through South Australian community networks to participate in this study. Decolonising methods of yarning and deep listening were used to centralise local narratives and language of OOPHE. Qualitative analysis software was used to thematically code transcripts and organise data.

Results: A total of seven yarning sessions were conducted with 10 participants. Seven themes were identified: travel, barriers to health care, personal and social loss, restricted autonomy, financial strain, support initiatives and protective factors. Sleeping rough, selling assets and not attending appointments were used to mitigate or avoid OOPHE. Government initiatives, such as the patient assistance transport scheme, did little to decrease OOPHE burden on participants. Family connections, Indigenous knowledges and engagement with cultural practices were protective against OOPHE burden.

Conclusion: Aboriginal families are significantly burdened by OOPHE when needing to travel for health care. Radical change of government initiative and policies through to health professional awareness is needed to ensure equitable healthcare access that does not create additional financial hardship in communities already experiencing economic disadvantage.

偏远土著家庭自付医疗费用的经历和影响。
导言:澳大利亚土著居民在健康方面面临着巨大的差异,他们的住院率是非土著澳大利亚人的 2.3 倍,住院时间也更长。这种额外负担通过自付医疗费用(OOPHE)进一步影响家庭,其中包括全民纳税人保险未涵盖的额外医疗费用。来自偏远地区的原住民患者很可能会受到自费医疗支出的进一步影响。本研究的目的是调查 OOPHE 对偏远地区原住民的影响和负担:方法:通过南澳大利亚社区网络招募参与者参与本研究。研究采用了 "聆听 "和 "深度倾听 "等非殖民化方法,以集中当地人对 OOPHE 的叙述和语言。使用定性分析软件对记录誊本进行主题编码并整理数据:共有 10 名参与者参加了 7 次学习活动。共确定了七个主题:旅行、医疗保健障碍、个人和社会损失、自主权受限、经济压力、支持措施和保护因素。露宿街头、变卖家产和不赴约被用来减轻或避免 OOPHE。病人协助交通计划等政府举措在减轻参与者的 OOPHE 负担方面作用甚微。家庭联系、原住民知识和文化习俗的参与对减轻 OOPHE 负担具有保护作用:结论:原住民家庭在需要外出就医时,会承受很大的 OOPHE 负担。为了确保公平获得医疗保健服务,同时又不给已经处于经济劣势的社区造成额外的经济困难,需要从根本上改变政府的举措和政策,提高医疗专业人员的认识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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