Direct patient costs of maternal care and birth-related complications at faith-based hospitals in Madagascar: a secondary analysis of programme data using patient invoices

Author:

Franke Mara Anna,Ranaivoson Rinja Mitolotra,Rebaliha Mahery,Rasoarimanana Sahondra,Bärnighausen Till,Knauss Samuel,Emmrich Julius ValentinORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesWe aimed to determine the rate of catastrophic health expenditure incurred by women using maternal healthcare services at faith-based hospitals in Madagascar.DesignThis was a secondary analysis of programmatic data obtained from a non-governmental organisation.SettingTwo faith-based, secondary-level hospitals located in rural communities in southern Madagascar.ParticipantsAll women using maternal healthcare services at the study hospitals between 1 March 2019 and 7 September 2020 were included (n=957 women).MeasuresWe collected patient invoices and medical records of all participants. We then calculated the rate of catastrophic health expenditure relative to 10% and 25% of average annual household consumption in the study region.ResultsOverall, we found a high rate of catastrophic health expenditure (10% threshold: 486/890, 54.6%; 25% threshold: 366/890, 41.1%). Almost all women who required surgical care, most commonly a caesarean section, incurred catastrophic health expenditure (10% threshold: 279/280, 99.6%; 25% threshold: 279/280, 99.6%). The rate of catastrophic health expenditure among women delivering spontaneously was 5.7% (14/247; 10% threshold).ConclusionsOur findings suggest that direct patient costs of managing pregnancy and birth-related complications at faith-based hospitals are likely to cause catastrophic health expenditure. Financial risk protection strategies for reducing out-of-pocket payments for maternal healthcare should include faith-based hospitals to improve health-seeking behaviour and ultimately achieve universal health coverage in Madagascar.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Berlin Institute of Health

Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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