Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey

This paper measures financial protection in health in Brazil by estimating the incidence and describes the profile of catastrophic expenditures and impoverishment due to household out-of-pocket (OOP) health spending. It uses the latest Brazilian consumption survey (POF 2017/2018) to analyze the comp...

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Main Authors: Edson Correia Araujo, Bernardo Dantas Pereira Coelho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-07-01
Series:Health Systems & Reform
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2021.1957537
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spelling doaj-04eb90482f134962a7676c08c9376c6c2021-10-04T13:57:04ZengTaylor & Francis GroupHealth Systems & Reform2328-86042328-86202021-07-017210.1080/23288604.2021.19575371957537Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption SurveyEdson Correia Araujo0Bernardo Dantas Pereira Coelho1The World BankThe World BankThis paper measures financial protection in health in Brazil by estimating the incidence and describes the profile of catastrophic expenditures and impoverishment due to household out-of-pocket (OOP) health spending. It uses the latest Brazilian consumption survey (POF 2017/2018) to analyze the composition of household health spending and applies two thresholds of household consumption to identify households facing catastrophic expenditures and impoverishment due to health care payments. Results show that a third of households spend more than 10% of their budget on health, and the share of households facing financial hardship is significantly higher among the Brazilian poor (37% among the bottom consumption deciles). Medicines are the main contributor to component of OOP health spending, reaching 85% of all OOP payments for the lowest consumption deciles. Households with women as household head and those with heads with more years of schooling have higher probability of incurring catastrophic health spending. Yearly, more than 10 million Brazilians are pushed into poverty due to OOP health care payments, which represents a larger percentage of individuals (4.87%) than reported globally (2.5%) or among Latin America and Caribbean countries (1.8%). Conclusions: Despite the achievements in implementing universal health coverage in Brazil, challenges remain to guarantee financial protection to its population (especially the Brazilian poor). Policies to expand access and affordability of essential medicines are key to improve financial protection in health in Brazil.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2021.1957537financial protection in healthoop catastrophic health spendinguniversal health coveragehealth care financing; brazil health system
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edson Correia Araujo
Bernardo Dantas Pereira Coelho
spellingShingle Edson Correia Araujo
Bernardo Dantas Pereira Coelho
Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey
Health Systems & Reform
financial protection in health
oop catastrophic health spending
universal health coverage
health care financing; brazil health system
author_facet Edson Correia Araujo
Bernardo Dantas Pereira Coelho
author_sort Edson Correia Araujo
title Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey
title_short Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey
title_full Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey
title_fullStr Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Financial Protection in Health in Brazil: Catastrophic and Poverty Impacts of Health Care Payments Using the Latest National Household Consumption Survey
title_sort measuring financial protection in health in brazil: catastrophic and poverty impacts of health care payments using the latest national household consumption survey
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Health Systems & Reform
issn 2328-8604
2328-8620
publishDate 2021-07-01
description This paper measures financial protection in health in Brazil by estimating the incidence and describes the profile of catastrophic expenditures and impoverishment due to household out-of-pocket (OOP) health spending. It uses the latest Brazilian consumption survey (POF 2017/2018) to analyze the composition of household health spending and applies two thresholds of household consumption to identify households facing catastrophic expenditures and impoverishment due to health care payments. Results show that a third of households spend more than 10% of their budget on health, and the share of households facing financial hardship is significantly higher among the Brazilian poor (37% among the bottom consumption deciles). Medicines are the main contributor to component of OOP health spending, reaching 85% of all OOP payments for the lowest consumption deciles. Households with women as household head and those with heads with more years of schooling have higher probability of incurring catastrophic health spending. Yearly, more than 10 million Brazilians are pushed into poverty due to OOP health care payments, which represents a larger percentage of individuals (4.87%) than reported globally (2.5%) or among Latin America and Caribbean countries (1.8%). Conclusions: Despite the achievements in implementing universal health coverage in Brazil, challenges remain to guarantee financial protection to its population (especially the Brazilian poor). Policies to expand access and affordability of essential medicines are key to improve financial protection in health in Brazil.
topic financial protection in health
oop catastrophic health spending
universal health coverage
health care financing; brazil health system
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2021.1957537
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