Economic Burden of Mental Illnesses in Pakistan.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Muhammad Ashar Malik, Murad Moosa Khan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The economic consequences of mental illnesses are much more than health consequences. In Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC) the economic impact of mental illnesses is rarely analyzed. This paper attempts to fill the gap in research on economics of mental health in LMIC. We provide economic burden of mental illness in Pakistan that can serve as an argument for reorienting health policy, resource allocation and priority settings.

Aim: To estimate economic burden of mental illnesses in Pakistan.

Methods: The study used prevalence based cost of illnesses approach using bottom-up costing methodology. We used Aga Khan University Hospital, Psychiatry department data set (N = 1882) on admission and ambulatory care for the year 2005-06. Healthcare cost data was obtained from finance department of the hospital. Productivity losses, caregiver and travel cost were estimated using socio-economic features of patients in the data set and data of national household survey. We used stratified random sampling and methods of ordinary least square multiple linear regressions to estimate cost on medicines for ambulatory care. All estimates of cost are based on 1000 bootstrap samples by ICD-10 disease classification. Prevalence data on mental illnesses from Pakistan and regional countries was used to estimate economic burden.

Results: The economic burden of mental illnesses in Pakistan was Pakistan Rupees (PKR) 250,483 million (USD 4264.27 million) in 2006. Medical care costs and productivity losses contributed 37% and 58.97% of the economic burden respectively. Tertiary care admissions costs were 70% of total medical care costs. The average length of stay (LOS) for admissions care was around 8 days. Daily average medical care cost of admitted patients was PKR 3273 (USD 55.72). For ambulatory care, on average a patient visited the clinic twice a year. The estimated average yearly cost for all mental illnesses was PKR 81,922 (USD 1394.65) and PKR 19,592 (USD 333.54) for admissions and ambulatory care respectively. In the sensitivity analysis productivity losses showed high variability (from USD 1022.17 million to USD 4007.01 million). Assuming a gate keeping role of primary healthcare (PHC) demonstrated a saving of USD 1577.19 million in total economic burden.

Implications for health policy: This study set out to generate evidence using a low cost innovative approach relevant to many LMICs. In Pakistan, like many LMICs, patients access tertiary care directly, even for illness that can be efficiently managed at PHC level. In economic terms the non-medical consequences of mental illnesses are far greater than medical consequences. Based on these finding we recommend, firstly, that mental illnesses should be prioritized equally as other illnesses in health policy and secondly there needs to be integration of mental health in primary health care in Pakistan.

巴基斯坦精神疾病的经济负担。
背景:精神疾病的经济后果远远超过健康后果。在低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC),很少分析精神疾病的经济影响。本文试图填补中低收入国家心理健康经济学研究的空白。我们提供了巴基斯坦精神疾病的经济负担,这可以作为重新调整卫生政策、资源分配和优先事项设置的论据。目的:估计巴基斯坦精神疾病的经济负担。方法:采用基于患病率的疾病成本方法,采用自下而上的成本计算方法。我们使用了阿迦汗大学医院精神科2005-06年住院和门诊的数据集(N = 1882)。医疗费用数据来自医院财务部。利用数据集中患者的社会经济特征和全国家庭调查数据,估计了生产力损失、护理人员和旅行成本。我们采用分层随机抽样和普通最小二乘多元线性回归的方法来估计门诊药物的成本。所有的成本估计都是基于ICD-10疾病分类的1000个bootstrap样本。来自巴基斯坦和区域国家的精神疾病流行数据被用来估计经济负担。结果:2006年巴基斯坦精神疾病经济负担为2504.83亿巴基斯坦卢比(PKR)(426427万美元)。医疗费用和生产力损失分别占经济负担的37%和58.97%。三级医疗入院费用占总医疗费用的70%。入院治疗的平均住院时间(LOS)约为8天。入院患者每日平均医疗费用为3273卢比(55.72美元)。在门诊治疗方面,平均每位患者每年到诊所就诊两次。估计所有精神疾病的平均年费用分别为入院和门诊费用81922卢比(1394.65美元)和19592卢比(333.54美元)。在敏感性分析中,生产力损失表现出很高的变异性(从102217万美元到400701万美元)。假设初级卫生保健(PHC)的把关作用表明节省了157719万美元的总经济负担。对卫生政策的影响:本研究旨在利用与许多低收入中低收入国家相关的低成本创新方法产生证据。在巴基斯坦,与许多中低收入国家一样,患者可以直接获得三级保健,即使是那些可以在初级保健一级有效管理的疾病。从经济角度来看,精神疾病的非医疗后果远远大于医疗后果。根据这些发现,我们建议,首先,精神疾病应与其他疾病一样在卫生政策中得到优先重视,其次,需要将精神卫生纳入巴基斯坦的初级卫生保健。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics publishes high quality empirical, analytical and methodologic papers focusing on the application of health and economic research and policy analysis in mental health. It offers an international forum to enable the different participants in mental health policy and economics - psychiatrists involved in research and care and other mental health workers, health services researchers, health economists, policy makers, public and private health providers, advocacy groups, and the pharmaceutical industry - to share common information in a common language.
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