Abstract

BackgroundSignificant health expenses can force households to reduce consumption of items required for daily living and long-term well-being, depriving them of the capability to lead economically stable and healthy lives. Previous studies of out-of-pocket (OOP) and other health expenses have typically characterized them as “catastrophic” in terms of a threshold level or percentage of household income. We aim to re-conceptualize the impact of health expenses on household “flourishing” in terms of “basic capabilities.”Methods and FindingsWe conducted a 2008 survey covering 697 households, on consumption patterns and health treatments for the previous 12 months. We compare consumption patterns between households with and without inpatient treatment, and between households with different levels of outpatient treatment, for the entire study sample as well as among different income quartiles. We find that compared to households without inpatient treatment and with lower levels of outpatient treatment, households with inpatient treatment and higher levels of outpatient treatment reduced investments in basic capabilities, as evidenced by decreased consumption of food, education and production means. The lowest income quartile showed the most significant decrease. No quartile with inpatient or high-level outpatient treatment was immune to reductions.ConclusionsThe effects of health expenses on consumption patterns might well create or exacerbate poverty and poor health, particularly for low income households. We define health expenditures as catastrophic by their reductions of basic capabilities. Health policy should reform the OOP system that causes this economic and social burden.

Highlights

  • With out-of-pocket payments (OOP) accounting for 68% of total health expenditures in 2005, Vietnam’s healthcare system presents substantial financial hardships for its primarily low income population [1]

  • Severe underfunding of the public healthcare system was accompanied by the development of a user-fee system in public health facilities and increased demand for unofficial payments by public health workers

  • Data Collection As three quarters of Vietnam’s population and 90% of its poor residents live in rural areas, we conducted our survey in Dai Dong, a rural commune 35 km west of Hanoi

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Summary

Introduction

With out-of-pocket payments (OOP) accounting for 68% of total health expenditures in 2005, Vietnam’s healthcare system presents substantial financial hardships for its primarily low income population [1]. Vietnam had established a state-run health system that provided free universal access, after the reunification of the country under Socialist Party rule in 1975. Financing for this system had been indirectly supported by economic aid from the Soviet Union, which was terminated by the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1990 [2]. A study of catastrophic (defined as OOP exceeding 40% of a household’s income after meeting subsistence costs) health expenditures in 89 countries ranked Vietnam at the top, with the highest proportion of households with catastrophic payments [4]. We aim to re-conceptualize the impact of health expenses on household ‘‘flourishing’’ in terms of ‘‘basic capabilities.’’

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