Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey

In this study, we examine whether and to what extent the health insurance system in Turkey provided adequate protection against high out of pocket expenditures in the period prior to "The Health Transformation Programme". Furthermore, we examine the distribution of out of pocket expenditur...

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Main Authors: D Minbay Bernard, S Nur Sulku
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2012-04-01
Series:Iranian Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.tums.ac.ir/PdfMed.aspx?pdf_med=/upload_files/pdf/20501.pdf&manuscript_id=20501
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spelling doaj-9db62c9e875549969f37ba2e62fb2f992020-12-02T06:52:33ZengTehran University of Medical SciencesIranian Journal of Public Health2251-60852012-04-014134864Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: TurkeyD Minbay BernardS Nur SulkuIn this study, we examine whether and to what extent the health insurance system in Turkey provided adequate protection against high out of pocket expenditures in the period prior to "The Health Transformation Programme". Furthermore, we examine the distribution of out of pocket expenditures by demographic characteristics, poverty status, health service type, access to health care and self-reported health status. We employ the 2002/03 National Household Health Expenditure Survey data to analyze financial burden of health care expenditure. Following the literature, we define high burdens as expenses above 10 and 20% of income. We find that 19%  of the nonelderly population were living in families spending more than 10% of family income and that 14% of the nonelderly population were living in families spending more than 20% of family income on health care. Furthermore, the poor and those living in economically less developed regions had the greatest risk of high out of pocket burdens. The risk of high financial burdens varied by the type of insurance among the insured due to differences in benefits among the five separate public schemes that provided health insurance in the pre-reform period. Our results are robust to three alternative specifications of the burden measure and including elderly adults in the sample population. We see that prior to the reforms there were not adequate protection against high health expenditures. Our study provides a baseline against which policymakers can measure the success of the health care reform in terms of providing financial protection.http://journals.tums.ac.ir/PdfMed.aspx?pdf_med=/upload_files/pdf/20501.pdf&manuscript_id=20501Out of Pocket ExpendituresFinancial BurdenHealth Care ReformTurkey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D Minbay Bernard
S Nur Sulku
spellingShingle D Minbay Bernard
S Nur Sulku
Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey
Iranian Journal of Public Health
Out of Pocket Expenditures
Financial Burden
Health Care Reform
Turkey
author_facet D Minbay Bernard
S Nur Sulku
author_sort D Minbay Bernard
title Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey
title_short Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey
title_full Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey
title_fullStr Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Financial Burden of Health Care Expenditures: Turkey
title_sort financial burden of health care expenditures: turkey
publisher Tehran University of Medical Sciences
series Iranian Journal of Public Health
issn 2251-6085
publishDate 2012-04-01
description In this study, we examine whether and to what extent the health insurance system in Turkey provided adequate protection against high out of pocket expenditures in the period prior to "The Health Transformation Programme". Furthermore, we examine the distribution of out of pocket expenditures by demographic characteristics, poverty status, health service type, access to health care and self-reported health status. We employ the 2002/03 National Household Health Expenditure Survey data to analyze financial burden of health care expenditure. Following the literature, we define high burdens as expenses above 10 and 20% of income. We find that 19%  of the nonelderly population were living in families spending more than 10% of family income and that 14% of the nonelderly population were living in families spending more than 20% of family income on health care. Furthermore, the poor and those living in economically less developed regions had the greatest risk of high out of pocket burdens. The risk of high financial burdens varied by the type of insurance among the insured due to differences in benefits among the five separate public schemes that provided health insurance in the pre-reform period. Our results are robust to three alternative specifications of the burden measure and including elderly adults in the sample population. We see that prior to the reforms there were not adequate protection against high health expenditures. Our study provides a baseline against which policymakers can measure the success of the health care reform in terms of providing financial protection.
topic Out of Pocket Expenditures
Financial Burden
Health Care Reform
Turkey
url http://journals.tums.ac.ir/PdfMed.aspx?pdf_med=/upload_files/pdf/20501.pdf&manuscript_id=20501
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