资源贫乏地区乙型肝炎患者的灾难性医疗支出和贫困状况

Aloni Alali, Benjamin Osaro, I. Jaja, Sarah Abere, A. Fajola
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摘要

导言:乙型肝炎是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,2016 年造成的死亡人数超过了艾滋病毒和艾滋病、结核病和疟疾的总和,因此,管理乙型肝炎的经济负担已成为人们关注的焦点。本研究旨在估算与乙型肝炎管理相关的灾难性医疗支出、预测因素以及乙型肝炎管理对受影响家庭的贫困化影响。研究方法以医疗机构为基础进行横断面调查,通过两阶段抽样选出 135 名乙型肝炎患者。采用结构化访谈问卷收集数据,并使用 SPSS 25 版进行分析。结果:受访者平均年龄为 41 岁,男性占 60%,女性占 40%。约 71% 已婚,近三分之二受过高等教育。大多数人(90.9%)自费治疗,只有 7.6% 的人有医疗保险,1.5% 的人有雇主保险。71.1%的家庭在乙肝治疗上的支出超过总支出的10%,导致财务灾难。灾难性医疗支出(CHE)的发生率为 71.1%,超支率为 20%,平均正超支率为 28.1%。受雇者对灾难性医疗支出具有保护作用。(OR=0.71; 95%CI=1.12 - 1.97) 治疗后,25.2% 的人陷入贫困,21.5% 的人陷入极端贫困。结论大多数乙型肝炎患者的医疗费用都是自费的。其中很大一部分人因支付治疗费用而陷入经济困境。对自费的严重依赖使乙肝患者家庭面临灾难性的医疗支出,而对病情的治疗又使受影响家庭陷入贫困。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Catastrophic Health Expenditure and Impoverishment Amongst Hepatitis B Patients in a Resource-Poor Setting
Introduction: The economic burden of managing hepatitis B has become a concern because viral hepatitis disease is a global public health problem that resulted in more deaths in 2016 than HIV and AIDs, Tuberculosis and Malaria individually. This study aimed at estimating the catastrophic health expenditure associated with managing hepatitis B, the predictors of the same and the impoverishing effect that management of hepatitis B has on affected households. Methods: A facility-based cross-sectional survey involving 135 hepatitis B patients selected through a two-stage sampling. Data was collected using a structured interviewer administered questionnaire and analyzed using SPSS version 25. Results: The average age of the respondents is 41, 60% male, 40% female. About 71% were married, and nearly two-thirds had tertiary education. Most (90.9%) paid for treatment out-of-pocket, only 7.6% had health insurance, and 1.5% were employer-covered. 71.1% of households spent over 10% of total expenditure on hepatitis B treatment, leading to financial catastrophe. Prevalence of Catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) was 71.1%, with a 20% overshoot and a mean positive overshoot of 28.1%. Being employed was protective against CHE. (OR=0.71; 95%CI=1.12 – 1.97) Post-treatment, 25.2% fell into poverty, and 21.5% into extreme poverty. Conclusion: Majority of hepatitis B patients pay out-of-pocket for healthcare. A major proportion of them are in financial catastrophe as a result of paying for treatment. The heavy reliance on out-of-pocket payment exposes the households of hepatitis B patients to catastrophic health expenditure and treatment of the condition impoverishes the affected households.
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