Access to treatment for diabetes and hypertension in rural Cambodia: Performance of existing social health protection schemes
Access to treatment for diabetes and hypertension in rural Cambodia: Performance of existing social health protection schemes
Background
Non-communicable diseases (NCD) pose challenges to Cambodia’s health system. Medicines for NCD are on the National Essential Medicines List but no clinical guidelines support their utilization. Two social health protection schemes aimed at the informal sector population exist (Health Equity Funds and Insurance) together with two disease-specific interventions (a Peer Educator Network and Chronic Diseases Clinics) targeted at NCD patients. This study examines performance of these various schemes in relation to NCD.
Methods
Cross-sectional household survey among 709 individuals self-reporting diabetes and/or hypertension in three geographical locations in rural Cambodia using a structured questionnaire investigating diagnostic and treatment pathways, health seeking behaviour, health expenditures, and financial coping mechanisms.
Results
Two third of respondents with NCD were female and 55% did not belong to any scheme. The majority (59%) were diagnosed in the private sector and only 56% were on allopathic treatment that was mainly sought in the private sector (49%). Outpatient treatment cost was higher in the private sector and when using multiple providers of care. The majority were indebted, 11% due to health-related expenses. Contrary to social health protection schemes, disease-specific interventions offered better access to allopathic treatment and provided medicines in accordance with NEML.
Conclusion
The benefit packages of existing social health protection schemes and services in the public health sector should be adjusted to cater for the needs of people living with NCD in rural Cambodia. Initiatives that offer active disease management strategies and promote patients and community participation appear more successful in increasing treatment adherence and decreasing the risk of financial hardship.
Bigdeli, Maryam
9509f2ba-86a8-4ee3-a8b3-66bac14d8dd0
Jacobs, Bart
a9381b44-1217-475f-a458-6b7bfd7e8c36
Men, Chean Rithy
278ca460-c0ed-45d2-8ac7-403a03590354
Nilsen, Kristine
306e0bd5-8139-47db-be97-47fe15f0c03b
Van Damme, Win
81969cb6-e47d-4552-89ce-c7b14a6cb42e
Dujardin, Bruno
206829dc-c8c9-4ca4-a3cc-d481ed3b73db
27 January 2016
Bigdeli, Maryam
9509f2ba-86a8-4ee3-a8b3-66bac14d8dd0
Jacobs, Bart
a9381b44-1217-475f-a458-6b7bfd7e8c36
Men, Chean Rithy
278ca460-c0ed-45d2-8ac7-403a03590354
Nilsen, Kristine
306e0bd5-8139-47db-be97-47fe15f0c03b
Van Damme, Win
81969cb6-e47d-4552-89ce-c7b14a6cb42e
Dujardin, Bruno
206829dc-c8c9-4ca4-a3cc-d481ed3b73db
Bigdeli, Maryam, Jacobs, Bart, Men, Chean Rithy, Nilsen, Kristine, Van Damme, Win and Dujardin, Bruno
(2016)
Access to treatment for diabetes and hypertension in rural Cambodia: Performance of existing social health protection schemes.
PLoS ONE.
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0146147).
Abstract
Background
Non-communicable diseases (NCD) pose challenges to Cambodia’s health system. Medicines for NCD are on the National Essential Medicines List but no clinical guidelines support their utilization. Two social health protection schemes aimed at the informal sector population exist (Health Equity Funds and Insurance) together with two disease-specific interventions (a Peer Educator Network and Chronic Diseases Clinics) targeted at NCD patients. This study examines performance of these various schemes in relation to NCD.
Methods
Cross-sectional household survey among 709 individuals self-reporting diabetes and/or hypertension in three geographical locations in rural Cambodia using a structured questionnaire investigating diagnostic and treatment pathways, health seeking behaviour, health expenditures, and financial coping mechanisms.
Results
Two third of respondents with NCD were female and 55% did not belong to any scheme. The majority (59%) were diagnosed in the private sector and only 56% were on allopathic treatment that was mainly sought in the private sector (49%). Outpatient treatment cost was higher in the private sector and when using multiple providers of care. The majority were indebted, 11% due to health-related expenses. Contrary to social health protection schemes, disease-specific interventions offered better access to allopathic treatment and provided medicines in accordance with NEML.
Conclusion
The benefit packages of existing social health protection schemes and services in the public health sector should be adjusted to cater for the needs of people living with NCD in rural Cambodia. Initiatives that offer active disease management strategies and promote patients and community participation appear more successful in increasing treatment adherence and decreasing the risk of financial hardship.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 13 December 2015
Published date: 27 January 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452464
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452464
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 7b4f10a2-d833-4505-b8be-486b39a2cb74
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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 10:54
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:35
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Contributors
Author:
Maryam Bigdeli
Author:
Bart Jacobs
Author:
Chean Rithy Men
Author:
Win Van Damme
Author:
Bruno Dujardin
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