Abstract

BackgroundMauritius embraces principles of a welfare state with free health care at point of use in any public facilities. However, the health financing landscape changed in 2007 when Private Health Expenditure (PvtHE) surpassed General Government Health Expenditure. PvtHE is predominately out of pocket (OOP) with only 3.4% related to premiums for private insurance. In 2014, Household OOP Expenditure on health accounted for 52.8% of total health expenditure. OOP is known to be regressive and to impact negatively on households’ living standards.ObjectivesThis paper aims to examine trends in OOP in Mauritius, to assess its impacts through an analysis of key indicators of financial protection, namely catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) and impoverishment due to OOP health expenditure. It also aims to predict core determinants of CHEs.MethodsHousehold Budget Surveys (HBS) of 2001/2002, 2006/2007 and 2012 were the primary source data. CHE and impoverishment were used to assess financial hardships resulting from OOP health payments. The incidence of CHE was estimated at three threshold levels (10,25 and 40%), using the budget share and the capacity to pay approaches. Impoverishment due to OOP was measured by changes in the incidence of poverty and intensity of poverty using the US$ 3.1 international poverty line. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify determinants of CHE.FindingsHousehold CHE increased from 5.78% in 2001/02 to 8.85% in 2012 and 0.61% in 2001/02 to 1.25% in 2012, for 10 and 40% thresholds, respectively. The incidence of CHE was significantly higher in urban areas compared to rural areas. The highest levels of CHEs were among households’ heads, who are retired rising from 1.62% in 2001/02 to 3.71% in 2012, followed by households’ head who are widowed from 2.29% in 2001/02 to 2.63% in 2012 and homemakers from 2.12% in 2001/02 to 2.57% in 2012 at the 40% threshold. The share of households pushed below the poverty line due to OOP dropped from 0.4% in 2001/02 to 0.2% in 2006/07 before rising to 0.34% in 2012. In 2012, poverty gap occurred only among households under poorest quintile 1 (0.24%) and quintile 2 (0.03%). Overall poverty gap dropped from 0.08% in 2001/02 to 0.05% in 2012. Logistic regression analysis revealed that the odds ratio of facing CHE were significant only among households with heads being retired and with a presence of an elderly member in the household.ConclusionDespite the rise in incidence of CHE between 2001 and 2012 the impact of OOP on the level of impoverishment and poverty gap has not been significant.

Highlights

  • Mauritius embraces principles of a welfare state with free health care at point of use in any public facilities

  • Impoverishment due to out of pocket (OOP) health payments for health service is not an official Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) indicator but it is an important reference as it links universal health coverage (UHC) to the first goal of the 2030 agenda for sustainable development [2,3,4]

  • Though catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) has been on the rise across most income groups over the three consecutive Household Budget Surveys (HBS) period the impact on the level of impoverishment and poverty gap has been low

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Summary

Introduction

Mauritius embraces principles of a welfare state with free health care at point of use in any public facilities. The Agenda, which comprises 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to be achieved by 2030, accentuates the importance for strengthened inclusive and integrated approaches to ensure that “no one is left behind” in achieving universal health coverage (UHC). UHC is monitored within the framework of the SDGs though three dimensions, including coverage of essential health services and financial risk protection. A core indicator of financial risk protection is the proportion of population experiencing catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) due to out-of-pocket (OOP) heath payments. Impoverishment due to OOP health payments for health service is not an official SDG indicator but it is an important reference as it links UHC to the first goal of the 2030 agenda for sustainable development [2,3,4]. A distinctive feature of financial risk protection within the pursuit of UHC is that it provides the interface between the health systems and core dimensions of well-being [5]

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