| Literature DB >> 29088302 |
Geoffrey A Anderson1,2, Lenka Ilcisin2, Peter Kayima3, Lenard Abesiga4, Noralis Portal Benitez3, Joseph Ngonzi4, Mayanja Ronald4, Mark G Shrime2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: It is Ugandan governmental policy that all surgical care delivered at government hospitals in Uganda is to be provided to patients free of charge. In practice, however, frequent stock-outs and broken equipment require patients to pay for large portions of their care out of their own pocket. The purpose of this study was to determine the financial impact on patients who undergo surgery at a government hospital in Uganda.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29088302 PMCID: PMC5663485 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Basic demographics.
| All Patients | Cesarean patients | Other Surgery | p values | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 295 | 182 | 113 | ||
| 4 (3–5) | 3 (3–4) | 5 (3–13) | p < 0.0001 | |
| 60 (30–120) | 60 (30–120) | 90 (60–180) | p = 0.0001 | |
| farmer 115 (39%) | farmer 62 (34%) | farmer 53 (47%) | ||
| business owner 47 (16%) | business owner 30 (17%) | business owner 17 (15%) | ||
| boda-boda driver 16 (5%) | boda-boda driver 11 (6%) | teacher 7 (6%) | ||
| 4 (3–5) | 4 (3–5) | 4 (3–6) | p = 0.02 | |
| 259.32 (113.32–468.04) | 259.91 (101.20–449.06) | 251.73 (147.58–476.47) | p = 0.47 |
Basic demographic information collected during the survey. All data presented are medians and IQR except number of patients and top three occupations.
a. This includes patients undergoing all procedures other than cesarean section
b. p-values comparing patients undergoing cesarean section and other surgeries
c. Per household, estimated median monthly expenditure as converted to USD corrected for 2011 PPP
Most common categories of surgical procedures.
| Procedure Category | Number (%) |
|---|---|
| General Surgery | 48 (16%) |
| Gynecologic Surgery | 24 (8%) |
| Orthopedic Surgery | 11 (4%) |
| Neurosurgery | 10 (3%) |
| ENT surgery | 6 (2%) |
Fig 1Pre and post- surgery poverty rates.
Poverty Rates before and after obtaining surgical care. Poverty levels were calculated using the $1.90 and $3.10/person/day expenditures adjusted to 2011 PPP USD. While not statistically significant, this rose to 49% (p = 0.41) and 67% (p = 0.66) respectively after surgery when all costs were accounted for. Rates were slightly higher in non-surgical patients based on patient response, but again not statistically different.
Summary of out-of-pocket expenditures and financial impact.
| All Patients | Cesarean patients | Other Surgery Patients | P values | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 295 | 182 | 113 | ||
| 75.90 | 67.47 | 118.06 | p = 0.0001 | |
| (36.26–160.90) | (33.73–120.59) | (42.17–320.46) | ||
| Medications | 50.60 | 42.17 | 84.33 | p = 0.0001 |
| (25.30–126.50) | (20.24–84.33) | (37.11–168.66) | ||
| Bandages, gloves, other supplies (IQR) | 25.30 | 22.35 | 25.30 | p = 0.0776 |
| (12.65–42.30) | (10.12–33.73) | (15.18–74.21) | ||
| Labs (IQR) | 18.97 | 11.38 | 22.77 | p = 0.0144 |
| (8.43–35.84) | (6.75–12.65) | (8.43–42.17) | ||
| Imaging (IQR) | 25.30 | 25.3 | 50.60 | p < 0.0001 |
| (21.08–63.25) | (21.08–25.30) | (25.30–126.50) | ||
| Other Medical Supplies (IQR) | 25.30 | 25.30 | 25.30 | p = 0.4783 |
| (16.87–46.38) | (16.87–42.17) | (16.87–101.20) | ||
| Made Informal payment, y (%) | 28 (9.5%) | 11 (6.0%) | 17 (15.0%) | p = 0.024 |
| 60.72 | 59.03 | 84.33 | p = 0.0066 | |
| (37.95–126.50) | (35.42–109.63) | (42.17–193.96) | ||
| 155.17 | 137.04 | 248.78 | p = 0.0001 | |
| (87.70–303.59) | (87.70–211.67) | (88.54–462.98) | ||
| Borrowed money, y (%) | 157 (53%) | 88 (48.4%) | 69 (61.1%) | p = 0.048 |
| Sold Possessions, y (%) | 63 (21%) | 26 (14.3%) | 37 (32.7%) | p < 0.000 |
| Lost job/ Unsure Job status when return, y (%) | 49 (16.6%) | 30 (16.5%) | 19 (16.8%) | p = 0.591 |
| Children’s education interrupted, y (%) | 26 (8.8%) | 13 (7.1%) | 13 (11.5%) | p = 0.165 |
| Forced to hire a professional attendant, y (%) | 12 (4.1%) | 2 (1.1%) | 10 (8.9%) | p = 0.001 |
| Received charity, y (%) | 16 (5.4%) | 8 (4.4%) | 8 (7.1%) | p = 0.428 |
d. p values represent difference between patients undergoing cesarean section and other surgical patients
e. All monetary values are in USD corrected for 2011 PPP
f. Many patients could not differentiate between medications and medical supplies because they were all purchased at the same place with 1 receipt, therefore these are grouped under medications causing this number to be inflated relative to the other expenses
Fig 2Catastrophic expenditure due to surgical care.
Depending on method of calculation and whether only direct medical or all direct costs are considered, between 7% and 32% of all interviewed patients had a catastrophic expenditure. Patients who underwent a procedure other than a cesarean section were more likely to undergo a catastrophic expenditure by either definition. When calculated as in 40% of yearly non-food expenses direct medical costs were different at p = 0.0001, and total direct costs p = 0.0001; when calculated as 10% of total yearly expenses, direct medical costs were different at p = 0.0002, and total direct costs p = 0.0034.