Short Communication
Quantifying the burden of out-of-pocket health
expenditure in India
R. Thakur
*
, S. Sangar, B. Ram, M. Faizan
Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi, India
article info
Article history:
Received 12 September 2017
Received in revised form
24 January 2018
Accepted 14 February 2018
Keywords:
Household
Dimensions
Expenditure
Health
abstract
Objectives: This study aims at analyzing the dimensions of the burden of out-of-pocket
(OOP) health expenditure in rural and urban India between 1999e2000 and 2011e2012.
Study design: Consumer Expenditure Survey data of the National Sample Survey for the
period of 1999e2000 (55th round), 2004e2005 (61st round), and 2011e2012 (68th round) have
been used in this study.
Methods: To analyze the dimension of OOP healthcare expenditure, this study has used
headcount measure, which includes change in the percentage of population paying OOP
health expenditure, concentration index of headcount, rank-weighted headcount, and gap
measures, which includes average per capita gap (health expenditure), mean positive gap,
concentration index, and rank-weighted gap for rural, urban, and all India level between
1999e2000 and 2011e2012.
Results: The authors have found that a large percentage of the population in rural and
urban India is still not reporting health expenditure. There is a huge difference between per
capita health expenditure in rural and urban areas during the study period. The percentage
of the population that reported OOP health expenditure has increased at the bottom level,
but the expenditure got more concentrated toward better-off people in both rural and
urban areas of the country in this time period. It is also clear from the results that the
concentration of average per capita gap (Co) in rural areas leans towards better-off people
more than in urban areas.
Conclusion: This study advocates for health sector reforms to protect households from the
significant burden of expenditure on critical health care.
© 2018 The Royal Society for Public Health. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Introduction
The common goal of health policies in every country is the
promotion of health and well-being of all people to a greater
possible extent within the given resource constraints.
1
Although health is affected by our physical and social envi-
ronments, our genes, and educational opportunities, to a
greater degree, it is also affected by our economic status and
* Corresponding author. Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi, 175005, India. Contact number: (office) þ911905267044, þ919418074239
(mobile).
E-mail address: ramna@iitmandi.ac.in (R. Thakur).
Available online at www.sciencedirect.com
Public Health
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/puhe
public health 159 (2018) 4 e7
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.puhe.2018.02.017
0033-3506/© 2018 The Royal Society for Public Health. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.