Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services

Severe illnesses may have important consequences for the poor in terms of the costs of treatment they have to bear and income erosion effects of those illnesses. The resulting depletion of wealth may also transmit poverty to the next generation. This study compared the cost of illness between the...

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Main Authors: Rahman, Mahjabeen, Ahmed, Syed Masud
פורמט: Research report
שפה:English
יצא לאור: BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED) 2019
נושאים:
גישה מקוונת:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13122
id 10361-13122
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-131222019-11-26T21:01:22Z Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services Rahman, Mahjabeen Ahmed, Syed Masud Ultra poor Morbidity Poverty CFPR/TUP Programme BRAC Poverty--Bangladesh. Rural poor--Health and hygiene--Bangladesh. Economics, Medical—Bangladesh. Severe illnesses may have important consequences for the poor in terms of the costs of treatment they have to bear and income erosion effects of those illnesses. The resulting depletion of wealth may also transmit poverty to the next generation. This study compared the cost of illness between the Selected Ultra Poor (SUP) and the Not Selected Ultra Poor (NSUP) households and investigated whether health expenditures are catastrophic. It also investigated the crisis coping mechanism for meeting the cost burden of illness and its implications f{Jr the poverty status of households. The survey interviewed SUP and NSU P households during February-March 2006 in Rangpur, Nilphamari and Kurigram, drawn randomly from the 'Challenging the Frontiers of Poverty Reduction- Targeting the Ultra Poor (CFPR/TUP) Repeat Survey 2005' based on those with severe illness. On average, tindings revealed lower direct costs of illness for SUP households compared to NSUP ones but higher indirect costs tor the former. A higher percentage of SUP households incurred catastrophic health care expenses compared to NSUP households. Asset depletion was tound to be lower among SUP households who also reported higher asset value compared to NSUP households. Potential positive etfect of the CFPR/TUP interventions was noted which may be important for guiding policy and practice by the programme. 2019-11-26T09:41:11Z 2019-11-26T09:41:11Z 2006-12 Research report Rahman, M., & Ahmed, S. M. (2006, December). Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services. Research Reports (2006): Health Studies, Vol - XXXIX, 113–145. http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13122 en application/pdf BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Ultra poor
Morbidity
Poverty
CFPR/TUP Programme
BRAC
Poverty--Bangladesh.
Rural poor--Health and hygiene--Bangladesh.
Economics, Medical—Bangladesh.
spellingShingle Ultra poor
Morbidity
Poverty
CFPR/TUP Programme
BRAC
Poverty--Bangladesh.
Rural poor--Health and hygiene--Bangladesh.
Economics, Medical—Bangladesh.
Rahman, Mahjabeen
Ahmed, Syed Masud
Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
description Severe illnesses may have important consequences for the poor in terms of the costs of treatment they have to bear and income erosion effects of those illnesses. The resulting depletion of wealth may also transmit poverty to the next generation. This study compared the cost of illness between the Selected Ultra Poor (SUP) and the Not Selected Ultra Poor (NSUP) households and investigated whether health expenditures are catastrophic. It also investigated the crisis coping mechanism for meeting the cost burden of illness and its implications f{Jr the poverty status of households. The survey interviewed SUP and NSU P households during February-March 2006 in Rangpur, Nilphamari and Kurigram, drawn randomly from the 'Challenging the Frontiers of Poverty Reduction- Targeting the Ultra Poor (CFPR/TUP) Repeat Survey 2005' based on those with severe illness. On average, tindings revealed lower direct costs of illness for SUP households compared to NSUP ones but higher indirect costs tor the former. A higher percentage of SUP households incurred catastrophic health care expenses compared to NSUP households. Asset depletion was tound to be lower among SUP households who also reported higher asset value compared to NSUP households. Potential positive etfect of the CFPR/TUP interventions was noted which may be important for guiding policy and practice by the programme.
format Research report
author Rahman, Mahjabeen
Ahmed, Syed Masud
author_facet Rahman, Mahjabeen
Ahmed, Syed Masud
author_sort Rahman, Mahjabeen
title Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
title_short Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
title_full Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
title_fullStr Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
title_full_unstemmed Morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
title_sort morbidity and poverty measuring economic burden of illness requiring inpatient services
publisher BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13122
work_keys_str_mv AT rahmanmahjabeen morbidityandpovertymeasuringeconomicburdenofillnessrequiringinpatientservices
AT ahmedsyedmasud morbidityandpovertymeasuringeconomicburdenofillnessrequiringinpatientservices
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