» Articles » PMID: 14601155

Catastrophe and Impoverishment in Paying for Health Care: with Applications to Vietnam 1993-1998

Overview
Journal Health Econ
Publisher Wiley
Date 2003 Nov 6
PMID 14601155
Citations 376
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This paper presents and compares two threshold approaches to measuring the fairness of health care payments, one requiring that payments do not exceed a pre-specified proportion of pre-payment income, the other that they do not drive households into poverty. We develop indices for 'catastrophe' that capture the intensity of catastrophe as well as its incidence and also allow the analyst to capture the degree to which catastrophic payments occur disproportionately among poor households. Measures of poverty impact capturing both intensity and incidence are also developed. The arguments and methods are empirically illustrated with data on out-of-pocket payments from Vietnam in 1993 and 1998. This is not an uninteresting application given that 80% of health spending in that country was paid out-of-pocket in 1998. We find that the incidence and intensity of 'catastrophic' payments - both in terms of pre-payment income as well as ability to pay - were reduced between 1993 and 1998, and that both incidence and intensity of 'catastrophe' became less concentrated among the poor. We also find that the incidence and intensity of the poverty impact of out-of-pocket payments diminished over the period in question. Finally, we find that the poverty impact of out-of-pocket payments is primarily due to poor people becoming even poorer rather than the non-poor being made poor, and that it was not expenses associated with inpatient care that increased poverty but rather non-hospital expenditures.

Citing Articles

Catastrophic and impoverishing out-of-pocket health expenditure in Ethiopia: evidence from the Ethiopia socioeconomic survey.

Tadiwos Y, Kassahun M, Derseh Mebratie A Health Econ Rev. 2025; 15(1):15.

PMID: 40025239 PMC: 11871602. DOI: 10.1186/s13561-025-00602-1.


Treatment costs of long-term invasive meningococcal disease sequelae: A literature review and Delphi study in Brazil.

de Siqueira Filha N, Cortes F, Kron M, Pitta M, Zanghelini F, de Veras B Braz J Infect Dis. 2025; 29(2):104514.

PMID: 39978116 PMC: 11889580. DOI: 10.1016/j.bjid.2025.104514.


Catastrophic health expenditure associated with non-inpatient costs among middle-aged and older individuals in China.

Zhang X, Zhu K Front Public Health. 2025; 12:1454531.

PMID: 39897174 PMC: 11782279. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1454531.


Evaluating catastrophic health expenditures among patients with long bone fractures in Ghana's major teaching hospitals: a hospital-based analysis.

Buunaaim A, Amenah M, Konadu-Yeboah D, Baidoo R, Asare A, Addo W BMC Health Serv Res. 2025; 25(1):82.

PMID: 39815307 PMC: 11734409. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-025-12250-6.


Out-of-Pocket Health Expenditure and Associated Factors: Insights From National Health Accounts (NHA) Using Panel Data Analysis.

Sofi S, Yasmin E Inquiry. 2024; 61:469580241309903.

PMID: 39720888 PMC: 11683796. DOI: 10.1177/00469580241309903.