Catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure in Ethiopia: evidence from the Ethiopia socioeconomic survey.

IF 2.7 3区 经济学 Q1 ECONOMICS
Yamlak Bereket Tadiwos, Meseret Molla Kassahun, Anagaw Derseh Mebratie
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Out-of-pocket payment remains one of the ways to finance health care in Ethiopia accounting 31%. These out-of-pocket health expense leads citizens' face catastrophic and impoverishing expenditure. The most recent survey-based study of catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure was done from the 2015/16 consumption and expenditure survey with finding of 2.1% and 1% respectively.

Objective: To assess catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure and the determinant factors of catastrophic health expenditure in Ethiopia, 2023 from the 2018/19 socioeconomic survey.

Methodology: A secondary data from Ethiopian socioeconomic survey 2018/19 conducted by Ethiopia's Central Statistical Agency and World Bank was used to assess the catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure at the national and subnational level by the Wagstaff and Van Doorslaer and Xu et al. methodology. Then binary logistic regression was computed by the STATA (ver.12) software to assess the determinant factors of catastrophic health expenditure.

Result: From 6770 households 1.49% and 0.89% of them in Ethiopia faced catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure respectively at 10% threshold level and households having a member with more facility visit had increased likelihood of facing catastrophic health expenditure (AOR = 2.45, 95%CI; 1.6-3.8) and also having member being hospitalized in the household had increased odds of facing catastrophic health expenditure (Adjusted odds ratio, AOR = 1.9, 95% confidence interval, CI; 1.19- 3.16). On the contrary, there is a decreased likelihood of facing catastrophic health expenditure among those who were insured for health (AOR = 0.58, 95%CI; 0.35- 0.97) and was in the richest consumption quintile group (AOR = 0.6, 95%CI; 0.47- 0.65).

Conclusion and recommendation: The finding indicates that there are still notable households facing catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure in Ethiopia especially in the lower consumption quintiles indicating inequity. In addition it is found that those with health insurance coverage, lower hospitalization and health service utilization had lower chance of facing catastrophic health payment. So it is suggested that activities that reduce hospitalization rate, increase insurance coverage and addressing the poor must be in place so that the catastrophic health cost incurred can be lowered at national level.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.20%
发文量
59
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Economics Review is an international high-quality journal covering all fields of Health Economics. A broad range of theoretical contributions, empirical studies and analyses of health policy with a health economic focus will be considered for publication. Its scope includes macro- and microeconomics of health care financing, health insurance and reimbursement as well as health economic evaluation, health services research and health policy analysis. Further research topics are the individual and institutional aspects of health care management and the growing importance of health care in developing countries.
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