Health care payments in the Asia Pacific: validation of five survey measures of economic burden.

View Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Many low and middle-income countries rely on out-of-pocket payments to help finance health care. These payments can pose financial hardships for households; valid measurement of this type of economic burden is therefore critical. This study examines the validity of five survey measures of economic burden caused by health care payments.

METHODS

We analyzed 2002/03 World Health Survey household-level data from four Asia Pacific countries to assess the construct validity of five measures of economic burden due to health care payments: any health expenditure, health expenditure amount, catastrophic health expenditure, indebtedness, and impoverishment. We used generalized linear models to assess the correlations between these measures and other constructs with which they have expected associations, such as health care need, wealth, and risk protection.

RESULTS

Measures of impoverishment and indebtedness most often correlated with health care need, wealth, and risk protection as expected. Having any health expenditure, a large health expenditure, or even a catastrophic health expenditure did not consistently predict degree of economic burden.

CONCLUSIONS

Studies that examine economic burden attributable to health care payments should include measures of impoverishment and indebtedness.

Abbreviation
Int J Equity Health
Publication Date
2013-07-03
Volume
12
Page Numbers
49
Pubmed ID
23822552
Medium
Electronic
Full Title
Health care payments in the Asia Pacific: validation of five survey measures of economic burden.
Authors
Reddy SR, Ross-Degnan D, Zaslavsky AM, Soumerai SB, Wagner AK