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The burden of maternal health care expenditure in India: multilevel analysis of national data

The burden of maternal health care expenditure in India: multilevel analysis of national data
The burden of maternal health care expenditure in India: multilevel analysis of national data
To quantify the economic burden of maternal health care services on Indian households and examine the levels of expenditure incurred in public and private health care institutions at the national, state and community levels. Cross-sectional population data from the 2004 National Sample Survey Organisation were used, which considered 9,643 households for the analysis where at least one woman received maternal health care services during the year preceding the survey. Multilevel linear regression techniques were used to estimate the effect of household, cluster and state characteristics on the proportion of maternal health care expenditures over total household expenditures. Over 80 % of households reported paying for maternal health care services, with those using private care facilities paying almost 4 times more than those using public facilities. Multilevel analyses show evidence of high burden of maternal health care expenditures, which varied significantly across states according to the level of health care utilisation, and with considerable heterogeneity at the household and community levels. Maternal health care services in India are offered free at the point of delivery, yet many families face significant out-of-pocket expenditures. The recent governmental policy interventions to encourage institutional births by providing nominal financial assistance is a welcome step but this might not help to compensate mothers for other indirect expenditures, especially those living in rural areas and poorer communities who are increasingly seeking care in private facilities.
1092-7875
1-9
Leone, Tiziana
bad788fd-5008-4a20-ad39-282fd96e6aca
James, K.S.
f8f9da9e-801c-4bd3-ad97-e6c691c726cc
Padmadas, Sabu S.
64b6ab89-152b-48a3-838b-e9167964b508
Leone, Tiziana
bad788fd-5008-4a20-ad39-282fd96e6aca
James, K.S.
f8f9da9e-801c-4bd3-ad97-e6c691c726cc
Padmadas, Sabu S.
64b6ab89-152b-48a3-838b-e9167964b508

Leone, Tiziana, James, K.S. and Padmadas, Sabu S. (2012) The burden of maternal health care expenditure in India: multilevel analysis of national data. Maternal and Child Health Journal, 1-9. (doi:10.1007/s10995-012-1174-9). (PMID:23114861)

Record type: Article

Abstract

To quantify the economic burden of maternal health care services on Indian households and examine the levels of expenditure incurred in public and private health care institutions at the national, state and community levels. Cross-sectional population data from the 2004 National Sample Survey Organisation were used, which considered 9,643 households for the analysis where at least one woman received maternal health care services during the year preceding the survey. Multilevel linear regression techniques were used to estimate the effect of household, cluster and state characteristics on the proportion of maternal health care expenditures over total household expenditures. Over 80 % of households reported paying for maternal health care services, with those using private care facilities paying almost 4 times more than those using public facilities. Multilevel analyses show evidence of high burden of maternal health care expenditures, which varied significantly across states according to the level of health care utilisation, and with considerable heterogeneity at the household and community levels. Maternal health care services in India are offered free at the point of delivery, yet many families face significant out-of-pocket expenditures. The recent governmental policy interventions to encourage institutional births by providing nominal financial assistance is a welcome step but this might not help to compensate mothers for other indirect expenditures, especially those living in rural areas and poorer communities who are increasingly seeking care in private facilities.

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Published date: November 2012
Organisations: Faculty of Social, Human and Mathematical Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 353601
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/353601
ISSN: 1092-7875
PURE UUID: 1714e586-a79f-4743-b7df-eed88e16bc15
ORCID for Sabu S. Padmadas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6538-9374

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Date deposited: 11 Jun 2013 12:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:16

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Contributors

Author: Tiziana Leone
Author: K.S. James

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