Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries

This study assessed the extent of household catastrophic expenditure in dental health care and its possible determinants in 41 low and middle income countries. Data from 182,007 respondents aged 18 years and over (69,315 in 18 low income countries, 59,645 in 15 lower middle income countries and 53,0...

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Published in:PLoS ONE
Main Author: Masood M.; Sheiham A.; Bernabé E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science 2015
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84928730305&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0123075&partnerID=40&md5=ec44813ddda11f5eac7356b8a011bc71
id 2-s2.0-84928730305
spelling 2-s2.0-84928730305
Masood M.; Sheiham A.; Bernabé E.
Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
2015
PLoS ONE
10
4
10.1371/journal.pone.0123075
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84928730305&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0123075&partnerID=40&md5=ec44813ddda11f5eac7356b8a011bc71
This study assessed the extent of household catastrophic expenditure in dental health care and its possible determinants in 41 low and middle income countries. Data from 182,007 respondents aged 18 years and over (69,315 in 18 low income countries, 59,645 in 15 lower middle income countries and 53,047 in 8 upper middle income countries) who participated in the WHO World Health Survey (WHS) were analyzed. Expenditure in dental health care was defined as catastrophic if it was equal to or higher than 40% of the household capacity to pay. A number of individual and country-level factors were assessed as potential determinants of catastrophic dental health expenditure (CDHE) in multilevel logistic regression with individuals nested within countries. Up to 7% of households in low and middle income countries faced CDHE in the last 4 weeks. This proportion rose up to 35% among households that incurred some dental health expenditure within the same period. The multilevel model showed that wealthier, urban and larger households and more economically developed countries had higher odds of facing CDHE. The results of this study show that payments for dental health care can be a considerable burden on households, to the extent of preventing expenditure on basic necessities. They also help characterize households more likely to incur catastrophic expenditure on dental health care. Alternative health care financing strategies and policies targeted to improve fairness in financial contribution are urgently required in low and middle income countries. © 2015 Masood et al.
Public Library of Science
19326203
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author Masood M.; Sheiham A.; Bernabé E.
spellingShingle Masood M.; Sheiham A.; Bernabé E.
Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
author_facet Masood M.; Sheiham A.; Bernabé E.
author_sort Masood M.; Sheiham A.; Bernabé E.
title Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
title_short Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
title_full Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
title_fullStr Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
title_full_unstemmed Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
title_sort Household expenditure for dental care in low and middle income countries
publishDate 2015
container_title PLoS ONE
container_volume 10
container_issue 4
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0123075
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84928730305&doi=10.1371%2fjournal.pone.0123075&partnerID=40&md5=ec44813ddda11f5eac7356b8a011bc71
description This study assessed the extent of household catastrophic expenditure in dental health care and its possible determinants in 41 low and middle income countries. Data from 182,007 respondents aged 18 years and over (69,315 in 18 low income countries, 59,645 in 15 lower middle income countries and 53,047 in 8 upper middle income countries) who participated in the WHO World Health Survey (WHS) were analyzed. Expenditure in dental health care was defined as catastrophic if it was equal to or higher than 40% of the household capacity to pay. A number of individual and country-level factors were assessed as potential determinants of catastrophic dental health expenditure (CDHE) in multilevel logistic regression with individuals nested within countries. Up to 7% of households in low and middle income countries faced CDHE in the last 4 weeks. This proportion rose up to 35% among households that incurred some dental health expenditure within the same period. The multilevel model showed that wealthier, urban and larger households and more economically developed countries had higher odds of facing CDHE. The results of this study show that payments for dental health care can be a considerable burden on households, to the extent of preventing expenditure on basic necessities. They also help characterize households more likely to incur catastrophic expenditure on dental health care. Alternative health care financing strategies and policies targeted to improve fairness in financial contribution are urgently required in low and middle income countries. © 2015 Masood et al.
publisher Public Library of Science
issn 19326203
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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