Challenges and experiences in linking community level reported out-of-pocket health expenditures to health provider recorded health expenditures: Experience from the iHOPE project in Northern Ghana
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PLOS ONE
Abstract
Out of pocket health payment (OOPs) has been identified by the System of Health Accounts
(SHA) as the largest source of health care financing in most low and middle-income countries.
This means that most low and middle-income countries will rely on user fees and copayments
to generate revenue, rationalize the use of services, contain health systems costs
or improve health system efficiency and service quality. However, the accurate measurement
of OOPs has been challenged by several limitations which are attributed to both sampling
and non-sampling errors when OOPs are estimated from household surveys, the
primary source of information in LICs and LMICs. The incorrect measurement of OOP
health payments can undermine the credibility of current health spending estimates, an otherwise
important indicator for tracking UHC, hence there is the need to address these limitations
and improve the measurement of OOPs. In an attempt to improve the measurement of
OOPs in surveys, the INDEPTH-Network Household out-of-pocket expenditure project
(iHOPE) developed new modules on household health utilization and expenditure by repurposing
the existing Ghana Living Standards Survey instrument and validating these new
tools with a ‘gold standard’ (provider data) with the aim of proposing alternative approaches
capable of producing reliable data for estimating OOPs in the context of National Health
Accounts and for the purpose of monitoring financial protection in health. This paper reports
on the challenges and opportunities in using and linking household reported out-of-pocket
health expenditures to their corresponding provider records for the purpose of validating
household reported out-of-pocket health expenditure in the iHOPE project.
Description
Research Article