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Inequity of healthcare access and use and catastrophic health spending in slum communities: a retrospective, cross-sectional survey in four countries

Authors :
Oyinlola Oyebode
Romaina Iqbal
Rita Yusuf
Catherine Kyobutungi
Jo Sartori
Samuel I Watson
Richard J Lilford
Simon Smith
Yen-Fu Chen
Peter J Diggle
Navneet Aujla
Iqbal Azam
Omar Rahman
Caroline Kabaria
Blessing Mberu
Bronwyn Harris
Helen Muir
Celia Taylor
Pauline Bakibinga
Olufunke Fayehun
Peter Kibe
Akinyinka Omigbodun
Ria Wilson
Godwin Yeboah
Ahsana Nazish
Eme Owoaje
Ziraba Kasiira
Nelson Mbaya
Shukri Mohammed
Anne Njeri
Narijis Rizvi
Syed Shifat Ahmed
Nazratun Choudhury
Ornob Alam
Afreen Zaman Khan
Doyin Odubanjo
Motunrayo Ayobola
Mary Osuh
Olalekan Taiwo
Vangelis Pitidis
João Porto de Albuquerque
Philip Ulbrich
Source :
BMJ Global Health, Vol 6, Iss 11 (2021), BMJ Global Health
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

IntroductionTracking the progress of universal health coverage (UHC) is typically at a country level. However, country-averages may mask significant small-scale variation in indicators of access and use, which would have important implications for policy choice to achieve UHC.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cross-sectional household and individual-level survey in seven slum sites across Nigeria, Kenya, Bangladesh and Pakistan. We estimated the adjusted association between household capacity to pay and report healthcare need, use and spending. Catastrophic health expenditure was estimated by five different methods.ResultsWe surveyed 7002 households and 6856 adults. Gini coefficients were wide, ranging from 0.32 to 0.48 across the seven sites. The total spend of the top 10% of households was 4–47 times more per month than the bottom 10%. Households with the highest budgets were: more likely to report needing care (highest vs lowest third of distribution of budgets: +1 to +31 percentage points (pp) across sites), to spend more on healthcare (2.0 to 6.4 times higher), have more inpatient and outpatient visits per year in five sites (1.0 to 3.0 times more frequently), spend more on drugs per visit (1.1 to 2.2 times higher) and were more likely to consult with a doctor (1.0 to 2.4 times higher odds). Better-off households were generally more likely to experience catastrophic health expenditure when calculated according to four methods (−1 to +12 pp), but much less likely using a normative method (−60 to −80 pp).ConclusionsSlums have a very high degree of inequality of household budget that translates into inequities in the access to and use of healthcare. Evaluation of UHC and healthcare access interventions targeting these areas should consider distributional effects, although the standard measures may be unreliable.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20597908
Volume :
6
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Global Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a60befa8872b4b762461508c4119bc8