Investigating parents/caregivers financial burden of care for children with noncommunicable diseases in Ghana
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Date
2015-11
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
BMC Pediatrics
Abstract
Background: The introduction of the Ghana national health insurance scheme (NHIS) has led to progressive and
significant increase in utilization of health services. However, the financial burden of caring for children with
non-communicable diseases (NCDs) under the dispensation of the NHIS, especially during hospitalization, is less
researched. This paper therefore sought to assess the financial burden parents/caregivers face in caring for children
hospitalized with NCDs in Ghana, in the era of the Ghana NHIS.
Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional survey of 225 parents or caregivers of children with NCDS hospitalized in
three hospitals. Convenience sampling was used to select those whose children were discharged from hospital
after hospitalization. Descriptive statistics such as frequencies and chi-square and logistic regression were used in
data analysis. The main outcome variable was financial burden of care, proxied by cost of hospitalization. The
independent variable included socio-economic and other indicators such as age, sex, income levels and financial
difficulties faced by parents/caregivers.
Results: The study found that over 30 % of parents/caregivers spend more than Gh¢50 (25$) as cost of treatment
of children hospitalized with NCDs; and over 40 % of parents/caregivers also face financial difficulties in providing
health care to their wards. It was also found that even though many children hospitalized with NCDs have been
covered by the NHIS, and that the NHIS indeed, provides significant financial relief to parents in the care of children
with NCDs, children who are insured still pay out-of-pocket for health care, in spite of their insurance status. It was
also found that there is less support from relatives and friends in the care of children hospitalized with NCDs, thus
exacerbating parents/caregivers financial burden of caring for the children.
Conclusions: Even though health insurance has proven to be of significant relief to the financial burden of caring
for children with NCDs, parents/caregivers still face significant financial burden in the care of their wards.
Stakeholders in health care delivery should therefore ensure that all children with NCDs including those excluded
from the NHIS should be covered by NHIS. A special effort focusing on identifying children with NCDs within the
lower income groups, especially from rural areas, in order to exempt them from any form of payment for their
health care is recommended.
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Keywords
Financial burden of care, National health insurance scheme, Cost of hospitalization non-communicable diseases, Children, Ghana