The economic impact of the insured patients with severe chronic and acute illnesses: a qualitative approach

Publons ID389815
Wos IDWOS:000344176400001
Doi10.3402/gha.v7.22526
TitleThe economic impact of the insured patients with severe chronic and acute illnesses: a qualitative approach
First Author
Last Author
AuthorsAji, B; Yamamoto, SS; Sauerborn, R;
Publish Date2014
Journal NameGLOBAL HEALTH ACTION
Citation11
Abstracta:4:{i:0;s:512:"Background: Little research has focused on the economic hardship among the insured with severe illnesses and high treatment costs, in particular, the consequence of poorer insurance coverage for high-cost illnesses. Therefore, we presented the case for identifying the experiences of insured patients with severe chronic and acute illnesses. This study identified a qualitative understanding of the economic impact of severe chronic and acute illnesses and household strategies to deal with high treatment costs.";i:1;s:350:"Design: Interviews were conducted with 19 insured households of three different health insurance programs with a family member that had been hospitalized for severe chronic or acute illnesses in either Banyumas or Margono Sukarjo hospitals in Banyumas, Central Java, Indonesia. A thematic analysis was applied to guide the interpretation of the data.";i:2;s:539:"Results: Insured households with a family member that had been hospitalized for severe chronic and acute illnesses were greatly affected by the high treatment costs. Four major issues emerged from this qualitative study: insured patients are still burdened with high out-of-pocket payments, households adopt various strategies to cope with the high cost of treatments, households experience financial hardships, and positive and negative perceptions of the insured regarding their health insurance coverage for acute and chronic illnesses.";i:3;s:754:"Conclusions: Askes and Jamsostek patients faced financial burdens from high cost sharing for hospital amenities, non-covered drugs, and treatments and other indirect costs. Meanwhile, Jamkesmas beneficiaries faced no financial burden for related medical services but were rather burdened with indirect costs for the carers. Households relied on internal resources to cover hospital bills as the first strategy, which included the mobilization of savings, sale of assets, and borrowing of money. External support was tapped secondarily and included financial support from extended family members, donations from neighbors and the community, and additional benefits from employers. However, insured households overall had positive perceptions of insurance.";}
Publish TypeJournal
Publish Year2014
Page Begin1
Page End11
Issn1654-9880
Eissn
Urlhttps://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000344176400001
AuthorDr BUDI AJI, S.KM, M.Sc.
File58544.pdf