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Economic burden and catastrophic cost among people living with sickle cell disease, attending a tertiary health institution in south-east zone, Nigeria

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  • C N Amarachukwu
  • I L Okoronkwo
  • M C Nweke
  • M K Ukwuoma

Abstract

Out-of-pocket spending and lack of adequate health policy support for people living with sickle cell disease in Nigeria may predispose to high economic burden and catastrophic cost. The objective of the study was to evaluate the economic burden and catastrophic cost of sickle cell disease patients in a Nigerian tertiary health institution. In this study, a cross-sectional descriptive survey design was used to study a sample of 149 sickle cell disease patients managed at University of Nigeria Teaching hospital Enugu, South east Nigeria. A structured pre-tested interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to collect primary data from adult participants and caregivers of paediatric patients. Data collection lasted for three months. The major findings were median monthly economic burden of approximately N76, 711 (US$385) per person. Of this, outpatient cost constituted approximately 88%. Admission, drugs and blood transfusion constitute the major contributors to the economic burden experienced by the sickle cell disease patients in the study. All socio-economic status groups suffered catastrophic expenditure but the poorest quartile had the highest incidence: 61% at 40% threshold, 71% at 30% threshold and at 88% at 10% threshold. Conclusion: economic burden was high for sickle cell disease patients who also suffered high catastrophic costs due to the impact of out-of-pocket expenditure. People living with sickle cell disease need financial protection especially for the poorest since they buy from the same market and incur same costs. Policy decision making to assist the sickle cell disease patients cope with cost of care is needful in Nigeria.

Suggested Citation

  • C N Amarachukwu & I L Okoronkwo & M C Nweke & M K Ukwuoma, 2022. "Economic burden and catastrophic cost among people living with sickle cell disease, attending a tertiary health institution in south-east zone, Nigeria," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 17(8), pages 1-12, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0272491
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0272491
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