Abstract

BackgroundBreast cancer disease is the most common cancer among Iranian women and imposing a significant financial burden on the households. This study calculated out-of-pocket (OOP), catastrophic health expenditure (CHE), and impoverishing health spending attributed to breast cancer in Iran.MethodsIn this cross-sectional household study, clinical and financial information on breast cancer and also household information (expenditures and income) were obtained through face-to-face interviews and completing a questionnaire by 138 women with this disease in 2019. We applied three non-food expenditure thresholds of 40, 20, and 10% to defining the CHE. Disease costs included periodical visits, diagnostic services, hospitalization care, treatment and rehabilitation services, home, and informal care. Households were disaggregated into socioeconomic status quintiles based on their Adult Equivalent values standardized monthly consumption expenditures. To identify the factors affecting these indicators, we performed the two different multivariate logistic regression models.ResultsThis study finds that each patient had a monthly average OOP payment of $US 97.87 for the requested services, leading to impoverished of 5.07% and exposed 13.77% of their households to CHE. These indicators have been mainly concentrated among the poor, as they have spent a large part of their meager income on buying the needed services, and for this purpose, most of them forced to sell their assets, borrow, or take a bank loan.ConclusionsThe patients in lower SES quintiles can be protected from impoverishing and catastrophic health spending by expanding insurance coverage, providing financial risk protection programs, and increasing access to quality and effective public sector services. Alongside, expanding inpatient coverage and adding drug benefits for the poor can significantly decrease their OOP payments.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer disease is the most common cancer among Iranian women and imposing a significant financial burden on the households

  • The findings indicate that the mean age of 138 patients participating in the study was 44.3 years (SD: 11.73), about a third of whom were illiterate and often lived in the urban

  • The results show that the cost of managing breast cancer disease causes 18.52% of households belonging to the first quintile to become poor, compared to zero in households belonging to the fifth quintile

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer disease is the most common cancer among Iranian women and imposing a significant financial burden on the households. Breast cancer is a chronic disease that requires expensive diagnostic, treatment, and rehabilitation services. The disease, especially in more advanced stages, leads to unemployment and reduced income, implying additional economic pressure on the patient and her family [6,7,8]. This financial pressure is even more tremendous for vulnerable groups such as poor or unemployed households [6]

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