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Published in: BMC International Health and Human Rights 1/2009

Open Access 01-12-2009 | Research article

Inequities in incidence, morbidity and expenditures on prevention and treatment of malaria in southeast Nigeria

Authors: Nkolika P Uguru, Obinna E Onwujekwe, Benjamin S Uzochukwu, Godwin C Igiliegbe, Soludo B Eze

Published in: BMC International Health and Human Rights | Issue 1/2009

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Abstract

Background

Malaria places a great burden on households, but the extent to which this is tilted against the poor is unclear. However, the knowledge of the level of the burden of malaria amongst different population groups is vital for ensuring equitable control of malaria. This paper examined the inequities in occurrence, economic burden, prevention and treatment of malaria.

Methods

The study was undertaken in four malaria endemic villages in Enugu state, southeast Nigeria. Data was collected using interviewer-administered questionnaires. An asset-based index was used to categorize the households into socio-economic status (SES) quartiles: least poor; poor; very poor; and most poor. Chi-square analysis was used to determine the statistical significance of the SES differences in incidence, length of illness, ownership of treated nets, expenditures on treatment and prevention.

Results

All the SES quartiles had equal exposure to malaria. The pattern of health seeking for all the SES groups was almost similar, but in one of the villages the most poor, very poor and poor significantly used the services of patent medicine vendors and the least poor visited hospitals. The cost of treating malaria was similar across the SES quartiles. The average expenditure to treat an episode of malaria ranged from as low as 131 Naira ($1.09) to as high as 348 Naira ($2.9), while the transportation expenditure to receive treatment ranged from 26 Naira to 46 Naira (both less than $1). The level of expenditure to prevent malaria was low in the four villages, with less than 5% owning untreated nets and 10.4% with insecticide treated nets.

Conclusion

Malaria constitutes a burden to all SES groups, though the poorer socio-economic groups were more affected, because a greater proportion of their financial resources compared to their income are spent on treating the disease. The expenditures to treat malaria by the poorest households could lead to catastrophic health expenditures. Effective pro-payment health financing and health delivery methods for the treatment and prevention of malaria are needed to decrease the burden of the disease to the most-poor people.
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Metadata
Title
Inequities in incidence, morbidity and expenditures on prevention and treatment of malaria in southeast Nigeria
Authors
Nkolika P Uguru
Obinna E Onwujekwe
Benjamin S Uzochukwu
Godwin C Igiliegbe
Soludo B Eze
Publication date
01-12-2009
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC International Health and Human Rights / Issue 1/2009
Electronic ISSN: 1472-698X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-698X-9-21

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