A study to assess catastrophic household expenditure on childhood illness in an urban slum in bijapur.

Journal: Indian Journal Of Community Medicine : Official Publication Of Indian Association Of Preventive & Social Medicine
Published:
Abstract

Objective: In this study, the various factors determining the out-of-pocket expenditure on child health care by households are discussed to answer the following questions: How much are households currently spending on child health care? Is there any role of socio-economic status of households on expenditure on child health care? What percentage of their income is spent on child health care and is it catastrophic?

Methods: Four slums with a total a population of 7000 were selected for this study. Households where there is history of illness/ sickness in children under 5 years in last one month were included in the study.

Results: There were a total of 218 episodes of child illness in the households. The household's belonging to socio- economic class I and II had higher spending on child's illness per episode as compared to households of socio- economic class III, IV, and V. Socioeconomic status was the key determinant of health care expenditure.

Conclusions: In this study, it has been found that almost all the households suffered from catastrophic health expenditure.

Authors
Shailaja Patil, Aditya Berad, Mahabaleshwar Angadi