Economic burden of malaria in rural Tanzania: variations by socioeconomic status and season

Date

2007

Authors

Somi, Masha
Butler, James
Vahid, Farshid
Njau, Joseph
Kachur, S Patrick
Abdulla, Salim

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Abstract

Objective: To determine the economic burden of malaria in a rural Tanzanian setting and identify any differences by socioeconomic status and season. Methods: Interviews of 557 households in south eastern Tanzania between May and December 2004, on consumption and malaria-related costs. Results: Malaria-related expenses were significantly higher in the dry, non-malarious season than in the rainy season. Households sought treatment more frequently and from more expensive service providers in the dry season, when they have more money. Malaria expenses did not vary significantly across socioeconomic status quintiles, but poorer households spent a higher proportion of their consumption in both seasons. Conclusion: Poorer households bear a greater economic burden from malaria relative to their consumption than better-off households. Households are particularly vulnerable to malaria in the rainy season, when malaria prevalence is highest but liquidity is lower. Alternative strategies to assist households to cope with seasonal liquidity issues, including insurance, should be investigated.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: economic conditions; health expenditure; health services; malaria; rural area; seasonal variation; socioeconomic status; adolescent; adult; article; controlled study; cost of illness; disease duration; disease transmission; health care cost; household; hu Economic burden; Malaria; Season; Socioeconomic status; Tanzania

Citation

Source

Tropical Medicine and International Health

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31