4.7 Article

The economic burden of malaria inpatients and its determinants during China's elimination stage

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.994529

Keywords

hospitalization costs; disparity; determinants; malaria; burden

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality for Young Scientists-Research on the Quality of Service and Joint Epidemic Prevention Mechanism of Family Doctors Contracted Service in Beijing from the Perspective of Medical-Prevention Integration
  2. National Science Foundation of China-Research on the Value Coupling Mechanism and Model Optimization Strategy of Integrated Community Medical and Elderly Care in China [9214026]
  3. [72004073]

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This study investigated China's malaria hospitalization costs and explored its determinants. The study found that there is a disparity in health protection for malaria hospitalization between rural and urban areas in China, and equivocal diagnosis and comorbidity contribute to high costs.
BackgroundMalaria burden is still worrisome, while empirical evidence from malaria-eliminated countries including China may provide inspiration for the world. ObjectiveThis study aimed to investigate China's malaria hospitalization costs and explore its determinants. MethodsStratified multistage sampling across provincial, municipal, and county hospitals was conducted in 2017. All the malaria medical records were retrieved from 2014 to 2016 in 70 hospitals. Parametric and non-parametric methods were employed to estimate hospitalization costs, and the non-parametric bootstrap was used to compare hospitalization costs among sample areas and assessed the uncertainty of its differences. Quantile regressions were conducted to identify the determinants of hospitalization costs. ResultsThe median hospitalization costs of 1633 malaria inpatients were 628 USD. Medication and laboratory tests accounted for over 70% of total expenditure. The median reimbursement rate was 41.87%, and this number was even lower in higher-level hospitals (<35%) and among the New Rural Cooperative Medical Scheme (<40%). Finally, health insurance type, hospital tier, clinical units, unknown fever, and comorbidity were the main determinants of hospitalization costs. ConclusionThe disparity of health protection for malaria hospitalization between rural and urban areas was noteworthy. Equivocal diagnosis and comorbidity are contributors of high cost as well. A reasonable payment system and enhanced capacities to treat malaria in a cost-effective way are suggested to reassure malaria economic burden.

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