Journal Article
The Economic Burden of Cancers on Indian Households
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| collection.link.125 |
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/4401
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| collection.name.125 |
C. Journal articles published externally
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| dc.contributor.author |
Mahal, Ajay
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| dc.contributor.author |
Karan, Anup
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| dc.contributor.author |
Fan, Victoria Y.
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| dc.contributor.author |
Engelgau, Michael
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| dc.date.accessioned |
2015-12-03T21:28:21Z
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| dc.date.available |
2015-12-03T21:28:21Z
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| dc.date.issued |
2013-08-12
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| dc.date.lastModified |
2021-04-23T14:04:13Z
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| dc.description.abstract |
We assessed the burden of cancer on households’ out-of-pocket health spending, non-medical consumption, workforce participation, and debt and asset sales using data from a nationally representative health and morbidity survey in India for 2004 of nearly 74 thousand households. Propensity scores were used to match households containing a member diagnosed with cancer (i.e. cancer-affected households) to households with similar socioeconomic and demographic characteristics (controls). Our estimates are based on data from 1,645 households chosen through matching. Cancer-affected households experienced higher levels of outpatient visits and hospital admissions and increased out-of-pocket health expenditures per member, relative to controls. Cancer-affected households spent between Indian Rupees (INR) 66 and INR 85 more per member on healthcare over a 15-day reference period, than controls and additional expenditures (per member) incurred on inpatient care by cancer-affected households annually is equivalent to 36% to 44% of annual household expenditures of matched controls. Members without cancer in cancer-affected households used less health-care and spent less on healthcare. Overall, adult workforce participation rates were lower by between 2.4 and 3.2 percentage points compared to controls; whereas workforce participation rates among adult members without cancer were higher than in control households. Cancer-affected households also had significantly higher rates of borrowing and asset sales for financing outpatient care that were 3.3% to 4.0% higher compared to control households; and even higher for inpatient care.
| en |
| dc.identifier.citation |
PLoS ONE
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| dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23204
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| dc.language.iso |
en_US
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| dc.publisher |
Public Library of Science
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| dc.rights |
CC BY 3.0 IGO
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| dc.rights.holder |
World Bank
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| dc.rights.uri |
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
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| dc.subject |
cancer
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| dc.subject |
Global Burden of Disease
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| dc.subject |
non-communicable chronic diseases
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| dc.subject |
NCDs
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| dc.subject |
economic shocks
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| dc.title |
The Economic Burden of Cancers on Indian Households
| en |
| dc.type |
Journal Article
| en |
| okr.date.disclosure |
2015-12-03
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| okr.doctype |
Publications & Research :: Journal Article
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| okr.doctype |
Publications & Research
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| okr.externalcontent |
External Content
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| okr.googlescholar.linkpresent |
yes
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| okr.identifier.doi |
10.1371/journal.pone.0071853
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| okr.identifier.report |
102485
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| okr.journal.nbpages |
e71853
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| okr.language.supported |
en
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| okr.peerreview |
Academic Peer Review
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| okr.relation.associatedurl |
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0071853
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| okr.topic |
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Cancer
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| okr.topic |
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Population & Development
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| okr.topic |
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Economic Theory & Research
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| okr.unit |
South Asia Human Development Unit
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| okr.volume |
8(8)
|
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