家庭大病后自费医疗开支对家庭食物消费的影响

Namrata Singh, Sumaira Qamar, Dhweeja Dasarathy, Hardik Sardana, Sanjana Kumari, A. Saraya
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的本研究的目的是了解自费医疗费用增加对家庭预算压力的影响,从而导致饮食消费的变化。设计/方法/方法这是一项基于医院的横断面研究,包括在印度德里一家大型三级保健公立医院就诊的414名患有慢性或重大疾病的患者。每个患者代表一个家庭,研究中家庭成员总数为2550人。调查问卷收集了12种主要食品消费变化的影响因素。发现家庭大病后食物消费的适度减少与以下因素相关:农村居住(p < 0.001)、储蓄减少(p < 0.001)、家庭物品销售数量增加(p < 0.001)、受影响儿童的教育程度(p < 0.001)、较高的社会经济地位(p < 0.001)和家庭患病后儿童开始工作(p = 0.043)。除了食物种类的减少,食物制作的质量也在下降。超过80%的家庭没有改变谷物(大米和小麦)、豆类和糖的摄入量。大多数家庭减少的食物是水果,其次是牛奶及其制品、蔬菜、肉和蛋、油和酥油。研究局限性/意义本研究是先前发表的另外两项研究的子集。在这两项研究中,作者未能完全涵盖这一方面,但他们理解疾病支出对食物消费的影响的重要性。作者研究了患病后受试者食物消费模式(而非数量)的变化。食物消费的天气变化对家庭营养状况的影响尚未得到研究。作者只收集了横断面、观察性数据,回忆偏倚不能完全排除和纠正。有了这些数据,只能得出关联,而不能得出因果关系。一个家庭的疾病状况是通过慢性病的存在和住院治疗来衡量的。这些措施没有考虑到疾病的类型和发作次数。本研究的数据无法捕捉家庭患病前的食物摄入是否充足/过量/不足。Kuppuswamy量表主要用于城市和城郊环境,在研究中也用于农村受试者,这可能导致农村SES的捕获受损。作者没有评估家庭是否通过公共分配系统等计划分配粮食,这可能导致食物消费的偏差减少。使用的问卷未被验证。实际意义本研究展示了阻碍合理食物消费的各种因素,包括非经济因素。政府的用户收费政策正在冲击较贫困地区,公平性和获得卫生保健的机会受到损害。应通过公共部门政策增加保健支出,以实施统一的保健。有必要进行更多的研究,以确定在制定统一分配利益的政策和干预措施时可以采取的措施。社会影响政府的用户收费政策正在打击较贫困地区,公平性和获得卫生保健的机会受到损害。应通过公共部门政策增加保健支出,以实施统一的保健。独创性/价值重大或慢性疾病影响金钱的获取和支出的优先次序,导致家庭和食品消费质量的恶化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of out-of-pocket medical expenditure after major illness in the family on food consumption of a household
Purpose The purpose of this study was to see the impact of increased out-of-pocket expenditure oh health care exerting budget pressure on households, which leads to change in dietary consumption. Design/methodology/approach It was a hospital-based cross-sectional study comprising 414 patients with a chronic or major illness attending a large tertiary care public hospital at Delhi, India. Each patient represented a household with total number of family members of 2,550 in the study. Questionnaire was used to gather data on factors responsible for changes in consumption of 12 major food items. Findings Moderate decrease in food consumption of a household after major illness is associated with: rural residence (p < 0.001), decrease in savings (p < 0.001), more number of household items sold (p < 0.001), education of the children affected (p < 0.001), upper socio-economic status (SES) (p < 0.001) and children started working after illness in family (p = 0.043). In addition to decrease in food items, there was also deterioration in quality of food preparation. More than 80% of the families did not change the intake of cereals (rice and wheat), pulses and sugar. Food items that were decreased by most families were fruits, followed by milk and its products, vegetables, meat and egg, oils and ghee. Research limitations/implications This study is a subset of other two studies previously published. The authors had not been able to cover this aspect fully in those two studies but understood the importance of impact of expenditure on illness on food consumption. The authors studied change in food consumption pattern (not amount) in subjects after illness. The impact of weather changes in food consumption on the impacted nutritional status of family has not been studied. The authors only collected cross-sectional, observational data and recall bias cannot be completely ruled out and corrected. With such data, only associations could be concluded, not causality. The illness condition of a household was measured by presence of chronic disease and inpatient treatment. Such measures did not take into account the types of illness and number of episodes. Data of this study cannot capture whether food intake of family prior to illness was sufficient/in excess/deficient. The Kuppuswamy scale, mostly used in urban and peri-urban settings, was also used for rural subjects in the study, which might have resulted in impaired capture of rural SES. The authors did not assess whether families were allocated food grains by schemes like public distribution system, which might have resulted in biased decrease in food consumption. Questionnaire used was not validated. Practical implications This study demonstrates the various factors that act as barriers to proper food consumption, including non-financial factors. The policy of user fee in government is hitting poorer section, and equity and access to health are compromised. Health expenditure should be increased by public sector policies to implement uniform healthcare. There is need for more studies to identify measures that could be put in place when designing policies and interventions for the uniform distribution of benefits. Social implications The policy of user fee in government is hitting poorer section, and equity and access to health are compromised. Health expenditure should be increased by public-sector policies to implement uniform healthcare. Originality/value Major or chronic illness affects money acquisition and priorities of expenditure, resulting in deterioration in quality of food consumption and by a household.
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