| Literature DB >> 31212985 |
Kerri Viney1,2, Tauhidul Islam3, Nguyen Binh Hoa4,5, Fukushi Morishita6, Knut Lönnroth7.
Abstract
The End Tuberculosis (TB) Strategy has the ambitious goal of ending the global TB epidemic by the year 2030, which is aligned to the Sustainable Development Goals. One of three high level indicators of the Strategy is the "catastrophic costs" indicator, which aims to determine the proportion of TB-affected households that incur TB-care related costs equivalent to 20% or more of their annual household income. The target is that zero percentage of TB-affected households will incur catastrophic costs related to TB care by the year 2020. In the Western Pacific Region of the World Health Organization, it is a priority to determine the financial burden of TB and then act to mitigate it. To date, eight countries in the Region have conducted nationally representative TB patient cost surveys to determine the costs of TB care. The results from four countries that have completed these surveys (i.e., Fiji, Mongolia, the Philippines, and Vietnam) indicate that between 35% and 70% of TB patients face catastrophic costs related to their TB care. With these results in mind, significant additional efforts are needed to ensure financial risk protection for TB patients, expand Universal Health Coverage, and improve access to social protection interventions. A multi-sectoral approach is necessary to achieve this ambitious goal by the year 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Western Pacific Region; catastrophic costs; social protection; tuberculosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31212985 PMCID: PMC6631110 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed4020094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Catastrophic out-of-pocket health, catastrophic costs related to tuberculosis care, and essential health services coverage index for Fiji, Mongolia, the Philippines, and Vietnam.
| Country | Catastrophic Out-of-Pocket Health Spending a (SDG 3.8.2) | Catastrophic Costs Related to TB Care | Universal Health Coverage Service Coverage Index (SDG 3.8.1) b |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fiji c | 3.37% | 40% | 66 |
| Mongolia d | 2.39% | 70% | 63 |
| Philippines e | 6.31% | 35% | 58 |
| Vietnam f | 9.81% | 63% | 73 |
Sources: Global Tuberculosis Report 2018 (2018); Global Health Observatory Data Repository (Western Pacific Region: 2017–2018): World Health Organization. a The threshold is for greater than 10% of total household expenditure or income. b This index is presented on a scale of 0 to 100. c The Fiji figure is from 2002. d The Mongolia figure is from 2012 e The Philippines figure is from 2015. f The Vietnam figure is from 2014. SDG = Sustainable Development Goal(s); TB = tuberculosis.
Figure 1National surveys of costs faced by tuberculosis (TB) patients and their households in the Western Pacific Region: current progress and plans (updated in May 2019).
Figure 2Results from the Fiji, Mongolia, Philippines, and Vietnam national surveys of costs faced by TB patients and their households, implemented 2016–2018. The number in the center of the circle is the best estimate of the percentage of TB patients and their households that experienced total costs that were above 20% of their annual income (i.e., catastrophic total costs). The outer ring shows the distribution of costs in three major cost categories. The number of TB patients included in each survey is shown after the country name. Source: Global Tuberculosis Report 2018, World Health Organization.
Examples of main cost categories and possible interventions that might be considered to eliminate costs or mitigate impact of costs.
| Cost Category | Possible Changes in Service Delivery | TB Patient Social Support and Social Protection Schemes |
|---|---|---|
| Direct medical: before TB | Streamline the TB patient pathway: Understand and adapt to treatment-seeking behaviors Update and promote the national standard of TB diagnosis and eliminate irrational testing Extend access to rapid molecular diagnostics Effectively use of chest radiography Improve links with private sector providers using consistent policies (e.g., quality of care, free of charge) | Reduce/subsidize/eliminate out-of-pocket payments (OOPs): Increase insurance coverage (general) Reimburse OOP made by TB patients Regulate and eliminate informal fees |
| Direct | Expand free-of-charge or highly subsidized TB service package including TB medicines, ancillary drugs, monitoring of adverse events, preventive treatment: Update and promote the national standard of TB care with an emphasis on people-centered care Eliminate irrational treatment, hospitalization and testing | Reduce/subsidize/eliminate OOP: Increase insurance coverage for TB-related services Increase insurance coverage for relevant comorbidities and risk factors Regulate and eliminate informal fees Improve provider payment mechanism to avoid over-provision of services |
| Direct non-medical | Advocate local health-seeking and for care models bringing services close to patients, including community- and workplace-based care: | Provide assistance via TB program: Cash transfer Specific allowances (e.g., food, transportation, etc.) by cash, voucher, or in-kind |
| Indirect | Range of interventions to enable earlier diagnosis and patient-centered care delivery that minimize time spent seeking and receiving care (decentralization, shorter waiting times, fewer health care visits, avoid unnecessary hospitalization, etc.): Improve health workers’ knowledge on social protection schemes Seamless link between health and social offices (one-stop site) Engage civil society and community organizations and volunteers in non-health sectors (social work, charity, legal services, and volunteers) | Facilitate enrolment of eligible patients/households in existing social protection schemes: Social assistance for poor and vulnerable families Sickness/disability grant Cash or in-kind transfer program |
Source: World Health Organization. Tuberculosis patient cost surveys: A handbook. 2017. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization.