1. Assessing catastrophic health expenditure and impoverishment in adult asthma care: a cross-sectional study of patients attending six public health clinics in Klang District, Malaysia
- Author
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Hussein, Norita, Ng, Chiu Wan, Ramli, Rizawati, Liew, Su May, Hanafi, Nik Sherina, Lee, Ping Yein, Cheong, Ai Theng, Ghazali, Sazlina Shariff, Pinnock, Hilary, Stoddart, Andrew, Schwarze, Jürgen, Khoo, Ee Ming, Hussein, Norita, Ng, Chiu Wan, Ramli, Rizawati, Liew, Su May, Hanafi, Nik Sherina, Lee, Ping Yein, Cheong, Ai Theng, Ghazali, Sazlina Shariff, Pinnock, Hilary, Stoddart, Andrew, Schwarze, Jürgen, and Khoo, Ee Ming
- Abstract
Background In Malaysia, asthma is a common chronic respiratory illness. Poor asthma control may increase out-of-pocket payment for asthma care, leading to financial hardships Malaysia provides Universal Health Coverage for the population with low user fees in the public health system to reduce financial hardship. We aimed to determine out-of-pocket expenditure on outpatient care for adult patients with asthma visiting government-funded public health clinics. We examined the catastrophic impact and medical impoverishment of these expenses on patients and households in Klang District, Malaysia. Methods This is a cross-sectional face-to-face questionnaire survey carried out in six government-funded public health clinics in Klang District, Malaysia. We collected demographic, socio-economic profile, and outpatient asthma-related out-of-pocket payments from 1003 adult patients between July 2019 and January 2020. Incidence of catastrophic health expenditure was estimated as the proportion of patients whose monthly out-of-pocket payments exceeded 10% of their monthly household income. Incidence of poverty was calculated as the proportion of patients whose monthly household income fell below the poverty line stratified for the population of the Klang District. The incidence of medical impoverishment was estimated by the change in the incidence of poverty after out-of-pocket payments were deducted from household income. Predictors of catastrophic health expenditure were determined using multivariate regression analysis. Results We found the majority (80%) of the public health clinic attendees were from low-income groups, with 41.6% of households living below the poverty line. About two-thirds of the attendees reported personal savings as the main source of health payment. The cost of transportation and complementary-alternative medicine for asthma were the main costs incurred. The incidences of catastrophic expenditure and impoverishment were 1.69% and 0.34% respectively. The
- Published
- 2024