| Literature DB >> 23849348 |
Xiaolin Wei1, Guanyang Zou, Jia Yin, John Walley, Huaixia Yang, Merav Kliner, Jian Mei.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Financial issues are major barriers for rural-to-urban migrants accessing tuberculosis (TB) care in China. This paper discusses the effectiveness of providing financial incentives to migrant TB patients (with a focus on poor migrants in one district of Shanghai using treatment completion and default rates), the effect of financial incentives in terms of reducing the TB patient cost, and the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio of the intervention.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23849348 PMCID: PMC3710084 DOI: 10.1186/2049-9957-1-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Demographics of migrant TB patients in the intervention and control districts
| Subjects | 90 | 93 |
| Male (%) | 48 (53) | 58 (62)a |
| Average age | 30 | 34b |
| Married (%) | 44 (49) | 51 (55)c |
| Education: illiterate and semi-literate (%) | 10 (11) | 12 (13)d |
| Employment: informal sector (labor intensive and service industry) (%) | 70 (78) | 81 (87)e |
| Have medical-related insurance in Shanghai (%) | 14 (16) | 21 (23) f |
aχ2 = 1.531,P = 0.216;bZ = 0.759,P = 0,448;cχ2 = 0.649,P = 0.421;dχ2 = 0.139;P = 0.709;eχ2 = 2.753, P = 0.097;fχ2 = 1.459, P = 0.227.
Figure 1Treatment outcomes of migrant TB patients in the intervention and control districts.
Cost of treatment for new TB patients in the intervention and control districts
| No of subjects | 52 | 43 |
| Male (%) | 31 (60) | 25 (58)a |
| Average age | 30 | 35b |
| Married (%) | 25 (48) | 13 (30)c |
| Education: illiterate and semi-literate (%) | 3 (5.8) | 5 (12)d |
| Employment: informal sector (labor intensive and service industry) (%) | 35 (67) | 35 (81)e |
| Have medical insurance in Shanghai (%) | 9 (17) | 10 (23)f |
| Average per capita annual family income (RMB) | 27,194 | 22,124g |
| Average annual family income (RMB) | 53,004 | 53,605h |
| Direct cost (RMB) | 8416 | 9743i |
| Direct medical cost (RMB) | 5929 | 6902j |
| Direct non-medical (RMB) | 2487 | 2841k |
| Transportation cost (RMB) | 290 | 262l |
| Food and accommodation (RMB) | 246 | 485m |
| Nutrition cost (RMB) | 1950 | 2094n |
| Direct cost/annual family income (%) | 16 | 18 |
aχ2 = 0.021, P = 0.884; bZ = −1.277, P = 0.202;cχ2 = 3.123, P = 0.077;dFisher’s exact test, P = 0.461;eχ2 = 2.409, P = 0.121;fχ2 = 0.520, P = 0.471;gZ = −0.969, P = 0.333;hZ = −0.565, P = 0.572;i Z = −1.436, P = 0.151;jZ = −1.028, P = 0.304; kZ = −1.537, P = 0.124; lNZ = −0.345, P = 0.730; mZ = −0.260, P = 0.795; nZ = −0.931, P = 0.352.
Incremental cost-effectiveness of the intervention
| Incremental cost (RMB) | 52,400 | 0 |
| Treatment completion rate: | | |
| Baseline period (%) | 78 | 73 |
| Project period (%) | 89 | 76 |
| Incremental effect (%) | 11 | 3 |
| Net incremental effect (%) | 8 | - |
| Incremental cost per increase of 1% treatment completion, when compared to the control arm (RMB) | 6,550 | |
| Default rate: | | |
| Baseline period (%) | 22 | 24 |
| Project period (%) | 11 | 23 |
| Incremental effect (%) | 11 | 1 |
| Net incremental effect (%) | 10 | - |
| Incremental cost per decrease of 1% default rate, when compared to the control arm (RMB) | 5240 |
Figure 2The poverty assessment tool for migrant TB patients.