Abstract
Abstract
Background
Rare diseases impose a heavy economic burden on patients’ families and society worldwide. This study used the samples from Sichuan Province in China to estimate the curative care expenditure (CCE) of ten rare diseases, for supporting the prioritization of rare disease health policies.
Methods
Multi-stage cluster sampling method was adopted to investigate 9714 rare disease patients from 1556 medical institutions in Sichuan Province. Based on the System of Health Accounts 2011, this study estimated the total CCE of 10 rare diseases, financing schemes, and their allocation among different medical institutions and groups of people.
Results
In 2018, the total CCE of the ten rare diseases was $19.00 million, the three costliest rare diseases were Hemophilia ($4.38 million), Young-onset Parkinson’s disease ($2.96 million), and Systemic Sclerosis ($2.45 million). Household out-of-pocket expenditure (86.00% for outpatients, 41.60% for inpatients) and social health insurance (7.85% for outpatients; 39.58% for inpatients) were the main sources of financing CCE. The out-of-pocket expenditures for patients with Young-onset Parkinson’s disease, Congenital Scoliosis, and Autoimmune Encephalitis accounted for more than 60% of the total CCE. More than 80% of the rare disease CCE was incurred in general hospitals. The 40–59 age group accounted for the highest CCE (38.70%) while men spent slightly more (55.37%) than women (44.64%).
Conclusions
As rare disease treatment is costly and household out-of-pocket expenditure is high, we suggest taking steps to include rare disease drugs in the National Reimbursement Drug List and scientifically re-design insurance coverage. It is also necessary to explore a multi-tiered healthcare security system to pay for the CCE of rare diseases and reduce the economic burden on patients.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),Genetics (clinical),General Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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