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Coping (more or less) with health shocks: A longitudinal perspective on financial protection from Nepal

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  • Sapkota, Vishnu Prasad
  • O’Donnell, Owen

Abstract

Catastrophic and impoverishing health spending – two indicators of financial protection used to monitor Universal Health Coverage – are usually estimated from cross-sectional data. Using a three-year (2016–2018) panel of households in non-metropolitan Nepal, we add to scant evidence on the dynamics of these indicators and test whether non-medical consumption falls when the indicators rise in response to health shocks. We find that catastrophic and impoverishing health spending are mostly transitory: at least 80% of episodes in one year do not continue into the next. A health shock is estimated to raise the likelihood of catastrophic and impoverishing health spending by 36.7 and 7.5 percentage points, respectively. Income falls by an estimated 11.7% if the shock is to a working head of household. Despite these effects, non-medical consumption does not fall. Consumption is smoothed mainly through use of savings and other coping that need not overly compromise long-run consumption potential. While this is somewhat reassuring given catastrophic health spending is mostly transitory, a sizeable minority has recurrent catastrophic spending, some households rely on more pernicious coping strategies, and others make no recourse to coping, in which case, a health shock is estimated to reduce consumption by 14.3%.

Suggested Citation

  • Sapkota, Vishnu Prasad & O’Donnell, Owen, 2025. "Coping (more or less) with health shocks: A longitudinal perspective on financial protection from Nepal," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 196(C).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:wdevel:v:196:y:2025:i:c:s0305750x25002748
    DOI: 10.1016/j.worlddev.2025.107188
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