PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

The immediate economic impact of maternal deaths on rural Chinese households.

  • Fang Ye,
  • Haijun Wang,
  • Dale Huntington,
  • Hong Zhou,
  • Yan Li,
  • Fengzhi You,
  • Jinhua Li,
  • Wenlong Cui,
  • Meiling Yao,
  • Yan Wang,
  • Study team for Economic Impact of Maternal Deaths in China

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038467
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 6
p. e38467

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE: To identify the immediate economic impact of maternal death on rural Chinese households. METHODS: Results are reported from a study that matched 195 households who had suffered a maternal death to 384 households that experienced a childbirth without maternal death in rural areas of three provinces in China, using quantitative questionnaire to compare differences of direct and indirect costs between two groups. FINDINGS: The direct costs of a maternal death were significantly higher than the costs of a childbirth without a maternal death (US$4,119 vs. $370, p<0.001). More than 40% of the direct costs were attributed to funeral expenses. Hospitalization and emergency care expenses were the largest proportion of non-funeral direct costs and were higher in households with maternal death than the comparison group (US$2,248 vs. $305, p<0.001). To cover most of the high direct costs, 44.1% of affected households utilized compensation from hospitals, and the rest affected households (55.9%) utilized borrowing money or taking loans as major source of money to offset direct costs. The median economic burden of the direct (and non-reimbursed) costs of a maternal death was quite high--37.0% of the household's annual income, which was approximately 4 times as high as the threshold for an expense being considered catastrophic. CONCLUSION: The immediate direct costs of maternal deaths are extremely catastrophic for the rural Chinese households in three provinces studied.