Caring for Children with Congenital Heart Diseases:Economic Burden of Pre-Surgical Management on Nigerian Families

Managing children with Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) attracts enormous cost especially in resource-poor settings like Nigeria. This study sought to determine the healthcare costs of pre-surgical management of CHD and describe its catastrophic effects on households. Using a semi-structured interview...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWest African journal of medicine Vol. 38; no. 2; p. 144
Main Authors Duru, C O, Okpokowuruk, F S, Adesina, A D, Worgu, G O, Adeniji, F O, Chinawa, J M, Aliyu, I
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Nigeria 01.02.2021
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Summary:Managing children with Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) attracts enormous cost especially in resource-poor settings like Nigeria. This study sought to determine the healthcare costs of pre-surgical management of CHD and describe its catastrophic effects on households. Using a semi-structured interviewer-administered questionnaire, caregivers of children with CHD were interviewed. Family income, type of CHD, co-morbidity, healthcare payment mechanism and healthcare cost were explored over 3 months prior to the study. Healthcare costs were then averaged to obtain monthly estimates. Catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) was defined as healthcare spending above 10% family monthly income. Factors associated with increased healthcare spending in CHD management were explored using the Kruskal Wallis test of significance. Of the 108 parents interviewed, 81.0% paid for healthcare using out-of-pocket payment mechanism. The median direct monthly medical and non-medical costs were N==3,625 (range: N==200 - N==59,350) [$10.07; range:$0.56-$164.86] and N==420 (range: N==150 -N ==11,000) [$1.17; range $0.42-$30.56] respectively. Hospitalisation and transportation accounted for majority of the direct medical and non-medical costs, respectively. About 36.1% of families suffered financial catastrophe. Catastrophic overshoot and mean positive overshoot were 5.6% and 30.8% above the 10% income threshold, respectively. The healthcare spending was significantly higher in families of children with CHD complicated with heart failure (p=0.001) and pulmonary hypertension (p=0.038) and those who suffered financial catastrophe (p=0.001). Health insurance did not significantly reduce healthcare spending among the insured(p=0.630). The economic burden of pre-surgical management of children with CHD is high in Nigeria. Appropriate interventions governmental and non-governmental organisations are needed to cushion the burden of healthcare costs on affected families.
ISSN:0189-160X