Abstract

BackgroundIn the Indian context, a household's caste characteristics are most relevant for identifying its poverty and vulnerability status. Inadequate provision of public health care, the near-absence of health insurance and increasing dependence on the private health sector have impoverished the poor and the marginalised, especially the scheduled tribe population. This study examines caste-based inequalities in households' out-of-pocket health expenditure in the south Indian state of Kerala and provides evidence on the consequent financial burden inflicted upon households in different caste groups.MethodsUsing data from a 2003-2004 panel survey in Kottathara Panchayat that collected detailed information on health care consumption from 543 households, we analysed inequality in per capita out-of-pocket health expenditure across castes by considering households' health care needs and types of care utilised. We used multivariate regression to measure the caste-based inequality in health expenditure. To assess health expenditure burden, we analysed households incurring high health expenses and their sources of finance for meeting health expenses.ResultsThe per capita health expenditures reported by four caste groups accord with their status in the caste hierarchy. This was confirmed by multivariate analysis after controlling for health care needs and influential confounders. Households with high health care needs are more disadvantaged in terms of spending on health care. Households with high health care needs are generally at higher risk of spending heavily on health care. Hospitalisation expenditure was found to have the most impoverishing impacts, especially on backward caste households.ConclusionCaste-based inequality in household health expenditure reflects unequal access to quality health care by different caste groups. Households with high health care needs and chronic health care needs are most affected by this inequality. Households in the most marginalised castes and with high health care need require protection against impoverishing health expenditures. Special emphasis must be given to funding hospitalisation, as this expenditure puts households most at risk in terms of mobilising monetary resources. However, designing protection instruments requires deeper understanding of how the uncovered financial burden of out-patient and hospitalisation expenditure creates negative consequences and of the relative magnitude of this burden on households.

Highlights

  • In the Indian context, a household’s caste characteristics are most relevant for identifying its poverty and vulnerability status

  • Our analysis shows that caste differences in per capita health expenditure are not similar for households with different levels of health care need, and there is an indication that very-high-need households belonging to the Paniya, Other Scheduled Tribes (ST)/Scheduled Castes (SC) and Other Backward Castes (OBC) caste groups do not have the means to cover what they are required to spend for health care

  • The per capita health expenditures reported by the four caste groups accord with their status in the caste hierarchy, with FC spending the most and Paniya spending the least

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Summary

Introduction

In the Indian context, a household’s caste characteristics are most relevant for identifying its poverty and vulnerability status. In the Indian context, it is not easy to identify a variable that can stratify the population into subgroups for analysing inter-group inequality and disparity. In the Indian context, caste indicates a hereditary, endogenous, closed and immutable group having a traditional association with an occupation and a particular position in the social hierarchy, whereas socio-economic status is an open and non-immutable characteristic of a household or group of households [12,13]. The increased dependence of the population, including the poor and vulnerable, on private health care providers, the lack of health insurance, and outof-pocket payments are leaving many impoverished [17,18,19,20,21,22,23]

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