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Progressivity of out-of-pocket costs under Australia's universal health care system: A national linked data study

Date

2023-01

Authors

Law, Hsei Di
Marasinghe, Dinith
Butler, Danielle
Welsh, Jennifer
Lancsar, Emily
Banks, Emily
Biddle, Nicholas
Korda, Rosemary

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

BACKGROUND In line with affordability and equity principles, Medicare-Australia's universal health care program-has measures to contain out-of-pocket (OOP) costs, particularly for lower income households. This study examined the distribution of OOP costs for Medicare-subsidised out-of-hospital services and prescription medicines in Australian households, according to their ability to pay. METHODS OOP costs for out-of-hospital services and medicines in 2017-18 were estimated for each household, using 2016 Australian Census data linked to Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) and Pharmaceutical Benefit Scheme (PBS) claims. We derived household disposable income by combining income information from the Census linked to income tax and social security data. We quantified OOP costs as a proportion of equivalised household disposable income and calculated Kakwani progressivity indices (K). RESULTS Using data from 82% (n = 6,830,365) of all Census private households, OOP costs as a percentage of equivalised household disposable income decreased from 1.16% in the poorest decile to 0.63% in the richest decile for MBS services, and from 1.35% to 0.35% for PBS medicines. The regressive trend was less pronounced for MBS services (K = -0.06), with percentage OOP cost relatively stable between the 2nd and 9th income deciles; while percentage OOP cost decreased with increasing income for PBS medicines (K = -0.24). CONCLUSION OOP costs for out-of-hospital Medicare services were mildly regressive while those for prescription medicines were distinctly regressive. Actions to reduce inequity in OOP costs, particularly for medicines, should be considered.

Description

Keywords

equity, health financing, healthcare, medicines, out-of-pocket cost, aged, humans, universal health care, semantic web, financing, personal, australia, national health programs, health expenditures, prescription drugs

Citation

Source

Health policy

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License

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