应对医疗费用:对灾难性支出和贫困测量的影响

Coping with health‐care costs: implications for the measurement of catastrophic expenditures and poverty

Health Economics · 2008
被引 16
人大 A-

中文导读

提出在缺乏正式健康保险时,家庭应对医疗费用的策略会扭曲灾难性支出和贫困的测量,并利用印度数据展示了调整后的指标如何揭示隐藏和暂时性贫困。

Abstract

In the absence of formal health insurance, we argue that the strategies households adopt to finance health care have important implications for the measurement and interpretation of how health payments impact on consumption and poverty. Given data on source of finance, we propose to (a) approximate the relative impact of health payments on current consumption with a 'coping'-adjusted health expenditure ratio, (b) uncover poverty that is 'hidden' because total household expenditure is inflated by financial coping strategies and (c) identify poverty that is 'transient' because necessary consumption is temporarily sacrificed to pay for health care. Measures that ignore coping strategies not only overstate the risk to current consumption and exaggerate the scale of catastrophic payments but also overlook the long-run burden of health payments. Nationally representative data from India reveal that coping strategies finance as much as three-quarters of the cost of inpatient care. Payments for inpatient care exceed 10% of total household expenditure for around 30% of hospitalized households but less than 4% sacrifice more than 10% of current consumption to accommodate this spending.Ignoring health payments leads to underestimate poverty by 7-8% points among hospitalized households; 80% of this adjustment is hidden poverty due to coping.

健康支出应对策略灾难性卫生支出贫困测量