Oral Health Care Out-of-Pocket Costs and Financial Hardship: A Scoping Review

IF 5.7 1区 医学 Q1 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
D. Proaño, H. Huang, S. Allin, B.M. Essue, S. Singhal, C. Quiñonez
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Abstract

The objective of this study is to characterize how financial hardship related to oral health care (OHC) out-of-pocket (OOP) spending has been conceptualized, defined, and measured in the literature and to identify evidence gaps in this area. This scoping review follows Arksey and O’Malley’s framework and synthesizes financial hardship from OHC concepts, methodologies, and evidence gaps. We searched Ovid-Medline, Ovid-Embase, PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus, EconLit, Business Source Premier, and the Cochrane Library. Gray literature was sourced from institutional websites (World Health Organization, United Nations, World Bank Group, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and governmental health agencies) as well as ProQuest Dissertations and Thesis Global. We used defined inclusion and exclusion criteria to select studies published between 2000 and 2023. Of the 1,876 records, 65 met our criteria. The studies conceptualized financial hardship as catastrophic spending, impoverishment, negative coping strategies, bankruptcy, financial burden, food insecurity, and personal financial hardship experience. We found heterogeneity in defining OHC OOP payments and services. Also, financial hardship was frequently measured as catastrophic health expenditure using cross-sectional designs and national household spending surveys from high-income and to a lesser extent lower-middle-income countries. We identify and discuss challenges in terms of conceptualizing financial hardship, study designs, and measurement instruments in the OHC context. Some of the common evidence gaps identified include studying the causal relationship in financial hardship from OHC, assessing the financial hardship and unmet dental needs due to cost relationship, and distinguishing the effect between pain/discomfort and esthetic/cosmetic dental treatments on financial hardship. Financial hardship in OHC needs further exploration and the use of consistent definitions as well must distinguish between treatments alleviating pain/discomfort from esthetic/cosmetic treatments. Our study is relevant for policy makers and researchers aiming to monitor financial protection of OOP payments on OHC in the wake of universal health coverage for oral health.
口腔医疗自付费用和经济困难:范围审查
本研究的目的是描述与口腔健康护理(OHC)自付(OOP)支出相关的经济困难在文献中是如何被概念化、定义和衡量的,并找出该领域的证据差距。本范围界定综述遵循 Arksey 和 O'Malley 的框架,从口腔健康护理的概念、方法和证据差距方面综合了经济困难。我们检索了 Ovid-Medline、Ovid-Embase、PubMed、Web of Science、Scopus、EconLit、Business Source Premier 和 Cochrane 图书馆。灰色文献来自机构网站(世界卫生组织、联合国、世界银行集团、经济合作与发展组织和政府卫生机构)以及 ProQuest Dissertations and Thesis Global。我们采用明确的纳入和排除标准来选择 2000 年至 2023 年间发表的研究。在 1,876 条记录中,有 65 条符合我们的标准。这些研究将经济困难概念化为灾难性支出、贫困化、消极应对策略、破产、经济负担、粮食不安全和个人经济困难经历。我们发现,对老年健康保险自付费用和服务的定义存在差异。此外,通过横截面设计和高收入国家的全国家庭支出调查,经济困难经常被衡量为灾难性医疗支出,中低收入国家的情况较少。我们确定并讨论了在老年保健背景下,经济困难的概念化、研究设计和测量工具方面所面临的挑战。一些常见的证据缺口包括:研究OHC经济困难的因果关系,评估经济困难和因费用关系而未满足的牙科需求,以及区分疼痛/不适和美学/美容牙科治疗对经济困难的影响。口腔健康方面的经济困难需要进一步探讨,并使用一致的定义,同时必须区分减轻疼痛/不适的治疗和美容/整容治疗。我们的研究对政策制定者和研究人员很有意义,他们的目标是在口腔健康全民医保之后,监测口腔健康方面的自费项目支付的经济保护情况。
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
Journal of Dental Research
Journal of Dental Research 医学-牙科与口腔外科
CiteScore
15.30
自引率
3.90%
发文量
155
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Dental Research (JDR) is a peer-reviewed scientific journal committed to sharing new knowledge and information on all sciences related to dentistry and the oral cavity, covering health and disease. With monthly publications, JDR ensures timely communication of the latest research to the oral and dental community.
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