This will be a prospective longitudinal study of children attending hospital for treatment of a severe illness with community follow-up in Lao People's Democratic Republic (Lao PDR). The study aims to summarise and describe short-term health and economic impacts of a severe childhood illness requiring hospital admission, from a household perspective.
This study aims to measure the out-of-pocket (OOP) expenses for households related to a severe acute illness/injury in children under five years presenting to hospitals in Lao PDR. Financial protection will be measured by determining proportions of households led to catastrophic health expenditures and impoverishment from OOP expenses, with further equity analyses across wealth quintiles, geographical residence, sex, parental education and ethnic subpopulations. Physical health and mental wellbeing outcomes of participants and household members will also be assessed to determine the multifaceted impact of severe childhood disease on a household. Participants will be recruited in outpatients, the emergency department (ED) or during hospital admission. Information on the participant's illness will be collected through health records where available. Household demographic data, financial costs and coping strategies associated with illness and health/wellbeing outcomes will be collected through parent/caregiver structured questionnaires. These will be conducted during presentation to outpatients/ED or during admission on the wards, with follow-up at 2 weeks and at 2 months post-presentation or post-discharge. Average total household out-of-pocket (OOP) expenses associated with the illness will be presented for the study population. An equity analysis will be performed by disaggregating and comparing mean/median OOP costs across wealth quintiles, sex, geographical location, parental education and ethnic groups.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
400
This is an observational study with no intervention
Lao-Oxford-Mahosot-Hospital Wellcome Trust Research Unit (LOMWRU)
Vientiane, Laos
Mean total out-of-pocket (OOP) expenses
Total OOP expenses are the combined total of direct (medical and non-medical) OOP expenses and indirect costs per household. Data will be collected from a parent/guardian questionnaire developed for the study and expenses will be calculated from onset of symptoms up to 2 months post-discharge from hospital; presented in Lao kip (LAK) and US dollars (USD). Outcome will be presented as mean total OOP expenses per household. Direct medical OOP costs include: consultation fees, fees for diagnostics, medicine and other treatment/remedy costs, hospital bed fees, transfer costs, insurance co-pay if applicable. Direct non-medical OOP costs include: travel costs for patient and accompanying carer/household member/s, daily living expenses for patient and accompanying carer/household member/s including food, childcare costs for other children at home, lodging. Indirect costs include: travel time, loss of income incurred from the cessation or reduction of work productivity.
Time frame: 2 months
Total number and percentage of households experiencing Catastrophic Health Expenditure (CHE) set at 10% total annual household expenditure (CHE10a)
CHE: defined as when the total OOP expenses exceeds a threshold proportion of household expenditures. CHE10a: The primary CHE threshold will be set at 10% of total annual household expenditure to align with Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) indicator 3.8.2. OOP expenses and household expenditures will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and CHE10a will be presented as a total number and as a percentage of study participants.
Time frame: 2 months
Total number and percentage of households experiencing CHE set at 10% monthly household expenditure (CHE10m)
CHE10m: a secondary CHE threshold will be set at 10% of monthly household expenditure to show the immediate financial impact of the illness OOP expenses and household expenditures will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and CHE10m will be presented as a total number and as a percentage of study participants.
Time frame: 2 months
Total number and percentage of households experiencing CHE set at 40% annual capacity to pay (CHE40a)
CHE40a: a secondary CHE threshold will be set at 40% annual capacity to pay (CTP) with previous studies suggesting it more effective at identifying poorer households. CTP: defined as the total household expenditures minus necessary subsistence expenditures (food, housing, utilities). OOP expenses and household expenditures will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and CHE40a will be presented as a total number and as a percentage of study participants.
Time frame: 2 months
Total number and percentage of households experiencing CHE set at 40% monthly CTP (CHE40m)
CHE40m: a secondary CHE threshold will be set at 40% monthly CTP with previous studies suggesting it more effective at identifying poorer households. CTP: defined as the total household expenditures minus necessary subsistence expenditures (food, housing, utilities). OOP expenses and household expenditures will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and CHE40m will be presented as a total number and as a percentage of study participants.
Time frame: 2 months
Total number and percentage of households experiencing Impoverishment Health Expenditure (IHE) set at international poverty line (IHE-i)
IHE: defined as households that fall below the poverty line due to the OOP payments associated with the severe illness. IHE-i: primary threshold will be presented for the international poverty line (US$1.90 per person per day) to align with SDG target 1.1. OOP expenses will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and IHE-i will be presented as a total number and as a percentage of study participants.
Time frame: 2 months
Total number and percentage of households experiencing Impoverishment Health Expenditure (IHE) set at national poverty line (IHE-n)
IHE-n: a secondary threshold will be presented for the national poverty line (LAK 280,910 per person per month) OOP expenses will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and IHE-n will be presented as a total number and as a percentage of study participants.
Time frame: 2 months
Median number of coping strategies used by households
Strategies households employ to finance the OOP costs related to the severe illness, defined as: use of savings, borrowing, help from others, asset sales, delayed plans, and/or reduced consumption. Data will be collected through a study developed questionnaire and will be presented as median number of coping strategies used per household.
Time frame: 2 months
Health outcomes of participating children - mean length of hospital admission
Length of hospital admission measured in days Data will be collected from participants' hospital medical records and will be presented as mean length of hospital admission per participant.
Time frame: 2 months
Health outcome of participating children - total number and percentage of deaths
Total number of deaths of participating children during study period, presented as total number and percentage of study population. Data will be collected from parent/guardian report in study developed questionnaire
Time frame: 2 months
Health outcome of participating children - total number and percentage of participating children reporting each recovery status
Recovery status defined as level of recovery from serious illness as reported by parent/guardian (full recovery, partial recovery, sicker than when left hospital, death). Recovery status will be presented as total number and percentage of study population reporting each recovery status and then ranked from highest to lowest percentage. Data will be collected from a study developed questionnaire
Time frame: at 2 weeks post-discharge from hospital
Health outcome of participating children - total number and percentage of participating children reporting each recovery status
Recovery status defined as level of recovery from serious illness as reported by parent/guardian (full recovery, partial recovery, sicker than when left hospital, death). Recovery status will be presented as total number and percentage of study population reporting each recovery status and then ranked from highest to lowest percentage. Data will be collected from a study developed questionnaire
Time frame: at 2 months post-discharge from hospital
Health outcome of participating children - total number of children returning to ED/hospital
Total number of participating children returning to ED/hospital as a complication of the initial severe illness. Data will be collected from parent/guardian report in study developed questionnaire and will be presented as total number and as percentage of study population.
Time frame: 2 months
Health outcome of participating children - mean change in nutritional status
Change in nutritional status defined as change in weight-for-height score presented as standard deviation (or z-score) from outpatient/ED presentation or hospital discharge. The z-score are compared to reference population z-scores as defined in WHO global database growth charts. Data will be collected through anthropometry measures (height and weight) and will be presented as mean difference in z-score for study population from start to end of study period.
Time frame: 2 months
Health outcome of participating children - total number and percentage with moderate to severe wasting
Number of participants with wasting defined as weight-for-height score presented as standard deviation \<-2 (z-score \<-2). Data will be collected through anthropometry measures (height and weight) and will be presented as total number and as percentage of study population.
Time frame: At enrolment (day 0)
Health outcome of participating children - total number and percentage with moderate to severe wasting
Number of participants with wasting defined as weight-for-height z-score \<-2. Data will be collected through anthropometry measures (height and weight) and will be presented as total number and as percentage of study population.
Time frame: 2 months
Health outcome of participating children - total number and percentage of children not admitted to hospital or early discharge from hospital
Total number of participants with patient/caregiver decision to not be admitted to hospital from outpatients/ED or discharge early from hospital against medical advice. Data will be collected from parent/guardian report in study developed questionnaire or participants' hospital medical records and will be presented as total number as percentage of study population.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of participant household members - median number of household members with same illness as participant child
Number of household members with same illness as participant. Data will be collected from parent/guardian report in study developed questionnaire and presented as median number of sick household members per household.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of participant household members - median number of deaths
Number of deaths of household members within each household during study period. Data will be collected from parent/guardian report in study developed questionnaire and presented as median number of deaths of household members per household.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of primary caregivers - total number and percentage of primary caregivers with worse nutritional status
Primary caregivers with worse nutritional status, defined as unintentional weight loss of \>5% from recruitment stage; and/or primary caregivers that are pushed into category of underweight (BMI \< 18 kg/m2) from recruitment stage. Data will be collected from anthropometry measures (height and weight) of primary caregivers and will be presented as total number and as a percentage of primary caregivers.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of primary caregiver - mean change in quality of life score (physical health)
The WHO Quality of Life - abbreviated version tool (WHOQOL-BREF) is a short-version of the WHOQOL-100, a validated tool developed by WHO to assess quality of life. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item questionnaire assessing four domains contributing to quality of life (physical health, psychological health, social relationships, environment). Each domain will produce a score from 0-100, with a higher score indicating a higher quality of life for that domain. The WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire will be conducted with the primary caregiver. Score for the physical health domain will be presented as mean difference in scores from start to end of study period.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of primary caregiver - mean change in quality of life score (psychological health)
The WHO Quality of Life - abbreviated version tool (WHOQOL-BREF) is a short-version of the WHOQOL-100, a validated tool developed by WHO to assess quality of life. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item questionnaire assessing four domains contributing to quality of life (physical health, psychological health, social relationships, environment). Each domain will produce a score from 0-100, with a higher score indicating a higher quality of life for that domain. The WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire will be conducted with the primary caregiver. Score for the psychological health domain will be presented as mean difference in scores from start to end of study period.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of primary caregiver - mean change in quality of life score (social relationships)
The WHO Quality of Life - abbreviated version tool (WHOQOL-BREF) is a short-version of the WHOQOL-100, a validated tool developed by WHO to assess quality of life. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item questionnaire assessing four domains contributing to quality of life (physical health, psychological health, social relationships, environment). Each domain will produce a score from 0-100, with a higher score indicating a higher quality of life for that domain. The WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire will be conducted with the primary caregiver. Score for the social relationships domain will be presented as mean difference in scores from start to end of study period.
Time frame: 2 months
Health and wellbeing outcomes of primary caregiver - mean change in quality of life score (environment)
The WHO Quality of Life - abbreviated version tool (WHOQOL-BREF) is a short-version of the WHOQOL-100, a validated tool developed by WHO to assess quality of life. The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item questionnaire assessing four domains contributing to quality of life (physical health, psychological health, social relationships, environment). Each domain will produce a score from 0-100, with a higher score indicating a higher quality of life for that domain. The WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire will be conducted with the primary caregiver. Score for the environment domain will be presented as mean difference in scores from start to end of study period.
Time frame: 2 months
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