Cost of Delivering Secondary Healthcare Through the Public Sector in India.
Journal
PharmacoEconomics - open
ISSN: 2509-4254
Titre abrégé: Pharmacoecon Open
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101700780
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Jun 2020
Jun 2020
Historique:
pubmed:
31
8
2019
medline:
31
8
2019
entrez:
31
8
2019
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
Government spending on provision of secondary healthcare has increased four-fold (in real terms) over the last decade in India. The evidence on the cost of secondary care to the health system is limited. The present study estimates the total and unit cost of services at community health centres (CHCs) and district hospitals (DHs) across India. The present study was undertaken in 19 CHCs and ten DHs across the four Indian states of Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Odisha to assess the economic cost of health services using a bottom-up methodology. Data on annual consumption of both capital and recurrent resources, spent in the provision of health services during the financial year of 2014-2015, were collected. Capital expenditure was annualised and shared resources were allocated to each of the shared activities using appropriate statistics. The mean annual costs of providing services at the CHC and DH level were 17 million Indian rupees (₹) ($US0.27 million) and ₹147 million ($US2.3 million), respectively. More than half of this annual cost was attributed to salaries (57% and 62% for CHC and DH level, respectively) and curative care (60% and 65%, respectively). At CHCs, the unit cost ranged from ₹134 (95% confidence interval [CI] 104-160) for an outpatient consultation to ₹3833 (95% CI 2668-5839) for institutional delivery. Similarly, at DH level, the unit cost varied from ₹183 (95% CI 124-248) for an outpatient consultation in an orthopaedics department to ₹4764 (95% CI 3268-6960) for an operation. The estimates from the present study may help generate benchmarks to aid in setting up provider payment rates and be used in future economic evaluations.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Government spending on provision of secondary healthcare has increased four-fold (in real terms) over the last decade in India. The evidence on the cost of secondary care to the health system is limited. The present study estimates the total and unit cost of services at community health centres (CHCs) and district hospitals (DHs) across India.
METHODS
METHODS
The present study was undertaken in 19 CHCs and ten DHs across the four Indian states of Himachal Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Odisha to assess the economic cost of health services using a bottom-up methodology. Data on annual consumption of both capital and recurrent resources, spent in the provision of health services during the financial year of 2014-2015, were collected. Capital expenditure was annualised and shared resources were allocated to each of the shared activities using appropriate statistics.
RESULTS
RESULTS
The mean annual costs of providing services at the CHC and DH level were 17 million Indian rupees (₹) ($US0.27 million) and ₹147 million ($US2.3 million), respectively. More than half of this annual cost was attributed to salaries (57% and 62% for CHC and DH level, respectively) and curative care (60% and 65%, respectively). At CHCs, the unit cost ranged from ₹134 (95% confidence interval [CI] 104-160) for an outpatient consultation to ₹3833 (95% CI 2668-5839) for institutional delivery. Similarly, at DH level, the unit cost varied from ₹183 (95% CI 124-248) for an outpatient consultation in an orthopaedics department to ₹4764 (95% CI 3268-6960) for an operation.
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSIONS
The estimates from the present study may help generate benchmarks to aid in setting up provider payment rates and be used in future economic evaluations.
Identifiants
pubmed: 31468323
doi: 10.1007/s41669-019-00176-9
pii: 10.1007/s41669-019-00176-9
pmc: PMC7248147
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Pagination
249-261Subventions
Organisme : USAID
ID : AID-386-A-14-00006
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