Knaul, 8 de diciembre del 2006 Knaul, 8 de diciembre del 2006 Taller de consulta sobre Medición de la Calidad de Vida: SALUD: QUE SABEMOS, QUE MÁS DEBERÍAMOS.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Partnerships for Health Reform Utilization and Expenditures on Outpatient Health Care by HIV Positive Individuals in Rwanda PHR Rwanda - Abt Associates.
Advertisements

THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Figure 1. Health Insurance Coverage and Uninsured Trends Data: Analysis of the U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey Annual.
Monitoring and measuring UHC. 2 Policy and planning Monitoring and Measuring UHC Key Messages Equity is fundamental to UHC – all people get services they.
Waging Inequality in America By Lawrence Mishel. The Middle Class Income Squeeze: Relentless, Persistent, and Accelerating.
Redistributive Impact and Efficiency of Mexico's Fiscal System John Scott, CIDE.
1 Jahangir A. M. Khan PhD Health Economics and Financing Research Group CEHS, icddr,b Financial Risk Protection for Universal Health Coverage - Indicators.
Measuring inequalities in health Adam Wagstaff Abdo Yazbeck.
1 Reducing the Gaps in Society: Policy Challenges in the Era of Globalization Dr. Karnit Flug June 2007 Taub Center Conference.
Employment and Development: Good Jobs and Bad Jobs Turin, Monday, May 22, 2006 François Bourguignon Senior Vice President and Chief Economist The World.
— A Proposal to Cover All Americans —. 2 Health Coverage Passport Charles N. Kahn III President Federation of American Hospitals National Congress On.
MEDICARE: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE James G. Anderson, Ph.D. Department of Sociology & Anthropology.
Health Care Reform Including migrants and other vulnerable populations - Al Hernandez Santana, LCHC.
Poverty in America The Economics of Poverty. Statistics Poverty in America Over half the world lives on under $2.00 per day. In 2003, over 12% of all.
Global Health Challenges Social Analysis 76: Lecture 5.
The Relationship between Poverty and Maternal Morbidity and Mortality in Sub-Saharan Africa Chad Meyerhoefer Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
UNICEF Report Card 10: Measuring Child Poverty CANADIAN COMPANION (excerpts)
Education Pays Education Pays.
Coping with health-care costs: implications for the measurement of catastrophic expenditures and poverty.
Rural Poverty and Hunger (MDG1) Kevin Cleaver Director of Agriculture and Rural Development November 2004.
Introduction to Economics: Social Issues and Economic Thinking Wendy A. Stock PowerPoint Prepared by Z. Pan CHAPTER 20 POVERTY AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF.
“Analyzing Health Equity Using Household Survey Data” Owen O’Donnell, Eddy van Doorslaer, Adam Wagstaff and Magnus Lindelow, The World Bank, Washington.
Georgian Health Care 2020 Washington DC, February 1-2, 2010
Using data to inform policies: Reducing Poverty by Supporting Caregivers, People Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWA) and Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC)
Health Care Reform Quynh Smith. Sources of Inefficiency in the Health Care Delivery System   We spend a substantial amount on high cost, low-value treatments.
& health spending in Mexico:
Tatyana Maleva Child Poverty and Social Exclusion in Russia III Intergovernmental Conference On Children in Europe and Central Asia Palencia, 2006.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND The Continuing Erosion of Health Benefits Among Workers with Low Wages Sara R. Collins, Ph.D. The Commonwealth Fund National Academy.
Exhibit 1. “Medicare Extra” Benefits vs. Current Medicare Benefits Current Medicare benefits*“Medicare Extra” Deductible Hospital: $1024/benefit period.
International Health Policy Program -Thailand The 3 rd Global Symposium on Health Systems Research Cape Town International Convention Center, Cape Town,
 Health insurance is a significant part of the Vietnamese health care system.  The percentage of people who had health insurance in 2007 was 49% and.
Discussant notes Monica Das Gupta Development Research Group The World Bank.
Social Welfare Policy Contending with Poverty In America.
Domestic Policy Social Welfare and Health. 3 The Evolution of Social Welfare Policies  Most of our major federal social welfare programs were developed.
Managed Care & Health Care Reform Cost of Health Care $2.4 trillion in 2008 ($7.900 per person) 17% of GDP US 10.9% Switzerland 10.7% Germany 9.7% Canada.
Latin America - Argentina - Mexico To come - Brasil, Chile, Peru, El Salvador.
Family Health Program Brazil Coverage and access Aluísio J D Barros Andréa D Bertoldi Juraci Cesar Cesar G Victora Epidemiologic Research Center, UFPel.
POPULATION, EDUCATION and HUMAN CAPITAL Cypher and Dietz, Ch. 12.
The economic Impact of HIV/AIDS in Uganda A Workshop on Economic Epidemiology, Makerere University 3 rd -5 th August 2009 Fred Matovu, Ph.D.
World Bank’s Thematic Group on Health, Nutrition and Population and Poverty REACHING THE POOR CONFERENCE, February, 2004 ASSESSING CHANGES IN TARGETING.
Providing a Safety Net. Why Households Differ One of the main reasons why household income differs is because the number of household members who work.
Is Education Key to the Growth? Motoo Kusakabe. Have we achieved a progress in Education? Improvement in last 30 years Primary Enrollment Rates nearly.
SOURCE: Kaiser Family Foundation estimates based on the Census Bureau's March 2014 Current Population Survey (CPS: Annual Social and Economic Supplements).
Medical Expenditure Burdens: The Impact of Tax Subsidies, Within-Year Expenditure Concentration, and More Thomas M. Selden, Ph.D. Division of Modeling.
Predictors of Asthma in Young Children Does Reporting Source Affect Our Conclusions? Jane E. Miller Jane E. Miller, Ph.D. Institute for Health, Health.
International Health Policy Program -Thailand NHA TEAM International Health Policy Program Draft report presentation for external peer review October 7,
Social Welfare Policymaking
Presented at The 129th Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association Atlanta, GA, October 21–25, 2001 Presented by Amanda A. Honeycutt Linda.
1 OECD Family Database Inaugaral ISCI Conference, Chicago, USA June, 2007 Annette Panzera OECD Social Policy.
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS), Health Care Expenditures for the Elderly with Chronic Conditions in 2012 Jeffrey Rhoades.
Inspiring People to Adopt Behaviors that Benefit the Community and Reduce Social Costs ServSafe TM : Benefits and Cost Reductions 4  Poor food handling.
Inter-American Development Bank Sustainable Development Department Marco FERRONI, Deputy Manager Social Capital and Social Cohesion: Definition and Measurement.
Insured, Uninsured and the Underinsured (US data). Olayinka Oladimeji Pharmaceutical Management for Underserved Populations. 03/21/07.
POLICIES FOR POVERTY ALLEVIATION Pedro Sáinz IBGE.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND An Ambitious Agenda for the Next President
Public Policy towards Public- Private Collaboration in Strengthening Health Systems World Bank Commitments and Challenges Donor Forum Paris, May
Overview of China’s health care reform Wen Chen, Ph.D., Professor Fudan School of Public Health March 21, 2016.
Catastrophic health expenditure Webinar PBF and Equity – 21 June 2012 Catherine Korachais, Public Health Dept, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp,
Session 3: International experience: Impact of social protection programs Puja Vasudeva Dutta World Bank.
Financing social protection 17 July 2009 Michael Samson UNICEF/ IDS Course on Social Protection.
Peterson-Kaiser Health System Tracker Health of the Healthcare System: An overview.
Out of Pocket Burdens for Health Care: Insured, Uninsured, and Underinsured Jessica Banthin, Ph.D. September 23, 2008.
Division of Health Systems and Public Health
U S A QUESTION 1-10 The number of people living in poverty in the United States decreased from 2009 to 2011.
How do health expenditures vary across the population?
AGE Annual Conference 2018, 6 June Brussels, Belgium
Medical Care.
World Health Organization
How do health expenditures vary across the population?
What is Poverty? STARTER
Financing Universal Health Care
Presentation transcript:

Knaul, 8 de diciembre del 2006 Knaul, 8 de diciembre del 2006 Taller de consulta sobre Medición de la Calidad de Vida: SALUD: QUE SABEMOS, QUE MÁS DEBERÍAMOS DE SABER Y COMO PODEMOS AVERIGUARLO

CATASTROPHIC AND IMPOVERISHING HEALTH SPENDING: A GLOBAL PROBLEM LAC – high rates and increasingly important challenge for families as demographic and epidemiological transitions proceed Asia: Van Doorslaer et al An additional seventy-eight million people or 2.7% of the total population, fall below the extreme poverty threshold of $1 per day after accounting for payments for health care. (11 COUNTRIES, 79% of the Asian population), This represents a 14% increase in the rate of extreme poverty. USA, Himmelstein, HEALTH AFFAIRS, Medical problems contributed to 50% of all bankruptcy files Globally, every year (WHO): 44 million households face catastrophic expenditure 25 million households are pushed into poverty by the need to pay for services. ANNUAL, GLOBAL ESTIMATE MAY BE ?4? TIMES HIGHER

Relative (more than 30% of disposable income): 3.4% 3.8% Absolute (pushed below poverty line or deeper into poverty): MEXICO 2000(PRE-REFORM): THE INCIDENCE OF ABSOLUTE AND RELATIVE IMPOVERISHMENT FROM HEALTH SPENDING IS HIGH, PARTICULARLY AMONG THE UNINSURED AND THE POOR. Absolute and/or relative: 6.3%, 1.5 million families per trimester =~ 4 million per year Insured: 2.2% Uninsured: 9.6% Poorest quintile, 910,000 families per trimester : 19.6 % Quintiles 2,3,4 and 5: 3.1% In the poorest quintile, 2/3 of families are below the poverty line and spend less than 30% of disposable income, and 22% cross the poverty line due to health spending. 30%+, 20% etc

AMONG POOR HOUSEHOLDS, IMPOVERISHING HEALTH EXPENDITURE IS CONCENTRATED IN MEDICINES AND AMBULATORY CARE; AMONG THE RICH, IN HOSPITALIZATION Source: Authors´ calculations based on ENIGH, poorIIIIIIV+ wealthy Medicines Ambulatory care Maternity Other Hospitalization

THE HIGHEST RATES OF RELATIVE AND ABSOLUTE IMPOVERISHMENT FROM HEALTH SPENDING ARE AMONG FAMILIES WITH OLDER ADULTS AND YOUNG CHILDREN, AND SINCE 2000 PARTICULARLY AMONG FAMILIES WITH OLDER ADULTS % of households Older adults and children Children, no older adults Neither children or older adults older adults, no children Source: Knaul F, Arreola H, Mendez O. Tendencias en la protecci ó n financiera en salud en M é xico. M é xico, D. F.: FUNSALUD,documento de trabajo, % of households with relative and/or absolute impoverishment

Health (care) or impoverishment Single mother earning 2 m.s. on Oaxaca, both children develop a throat infection: doctor visits and antibiotics >30% of disposable income 6-person family in Veracruz, below poverty line, agricultural worker grandmother-Type II diabetes Child with cancer

How do families finance health events?: often by reducing investment in other basic needs and human capital, 2001 Vivienda ALL Poorest 20% FOOD HOUSING EDUCATION ANY OF THE ABOVE 18% 12% 5% 6% 18% 20% 47% 35% Source: Authors´ calculations based on ENAGS, 2001.

1.How can measurement and definition issues be improved? 2.What are the determinants of excessive, catastrophic and impoverishing health expenditure among families? 3.What is the effect on poverty, human capital and family well-being (eg. Gertler and Gruber) at the micro level and, on firms, labor markets, growth and competitiveness at the macro level? 4.Is there impact/a causal relationship between the changes in fairness of finance and the efforts to achieve financial protection that are proposed in reforms and policies? Future research

1.Explaining and correcting variation across surveys health spending, total spending and family income health spending, total spending and family income 2.Defining periodicity and the timeframe of impoverishment Once per year; number of times per year Once per year; number of times per year Once per week, month, trimester Once per week, month, trimester 3.Measuring changes over time – longitudinal data 4.Expanding and improving concepts and methodologies measurement of disposable income measurement of disposable income objectively defining ´catastrophic´ and deepening impoverishment objectively defining ´catastrophic´ and deepening impoverishment Incorporating income losses due to ill health Incorporating income losses due to ill health Studies of impact Studies of impact Other indices Other indices Methodological and data-related challenges

1.Registry and bank of health and health establishment surveys for LAC – especially older surveys 2.´Standardized´ questionnaires (similiar to LFP) 3.Link health surveys to other data bases: Calidad de Vida Calidad de Vida Encuestas de Ingreso y Gasto de los Hogares Encuestas de Ingreso y Gasto de los Hogares 4.Links to administrative data More, and more general requirements

Knaul, 8 de diciembre del 2006 Knaul, 8 de diciembre del 2006 Taller de consulta sobre Medición de la Calidad de Vida: SALUD: QUE SABEMOS, QUE MÁS DEBERÍAMOS DE SABER Y COMO PODEMOS AVERIGUARLO