Abstract

The costliest 5% of the population (identified as the “high-cost” population) accounts for 50% of healthcare spending. Understanding the high-cost population in rural China from the family perspective is essential for health insurers, governments, and families. Using the health insurance database, we tallied 202,482 families that generated medical expenditure in 2014. The Lorentz curve and the Gini coefficient were adopted to describe the medical expenditure clustering, and a logistic regression model was used to identify the determinants of high-cost families. Household medical expenditure showed an extremely uneven distribution, with a Gini coefficient of 0.76. High-cost families spent 54.0% of the total expenditure. The values for family size, average age, and distance from and arrival time to the county hospital of high-cost families were 4.05, 43.18 years, 29.67 km, and 45.09 min, respectively, which differed from the values of the remaining families (3.68, 42.46 years, 30.47 km, and 46.29 min, respectively). More high-cost families live in towns with low-capacity township hospitals and better traffic conditions than the remaining families (28.98% vs. 12.99%, and 71.19% vs. 69.6%, respectively). The logistic regression model indicated that family size, average age, children, time to county hospital, capacity of township hospital, traffic conditions, economic status, healthcare utilizations, and the utilization level were associated with high household medical expenditure. Primary care and health insurance policy should be improved to guide the behaviors of rural residents, reduce their economic burden, and minimize healthcare spending.

Highlights

  • Medical expenditure clustering is a phenomenon that reflects the uneven distribution of medical expenditure among a given population [1]

  • The logistic regression model indicated that family size, average age, children, time to county hospital, capacity of township hospital, traffic conditions, economic status, healthcare utilizations, and the utilization level were associated with high household medical expenditure

  • This study aims to analyze the clustering of household expenditure using the New Rural Cooperative Medical Scheme (NCMS) database, to explore the characteristics of HC families, and to ascertain the determinants of the annual household health expenditure in general

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Summary

Introduction

Medical expenditure clustering is a phenomenon that reflects the uneven distribution of medical expenditure among a given population [1]. Medical expenditure clustering has been discussed intensively in healthcare research because a frequently cited report showed that the costliest 5% of patients accounted for approximately 50% of the total annual health spending [2]. A large number of studies within the United States have confirmed that a small group of the most expensive patients, identified as the “high-cost” (HC) patients, spent a disproportionate amount of healthcare expenditure [3,4,5]. A few studies from European countries and Taiwan with different health insurance schemes and healthcare delivery systems showed similar findings [5,6,7]. Public Health 2018, 15, 2673; doi:10.3390/ijerph15122673 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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