Assessing catastrophic and impoverishing effects of health care payments in Uganda.

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Assessing catastrophic and impoverishing effects of health care payments in Uganda. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P6179Dimensions Publication ID1008273096
P356DOI10.1186/S12913-015-0682-X
P932PMC publication ID4310024
P698PubMed publication ID25608482
P5875ResearchGate publication ID271222391

P50authorJohn E AtagubaQ82458911
P2093author name stringBrendan Kwesiga
Charlotte M Zikusooka
P2860cites workChanges in utilization of health services among poor and rural residents in Uganda: are reforms benefitting the poor?Q30491824
Effect of payments for health care on poverty estimates in 11 countries in Asia: an analysis of household survey data.Q31067291
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Quantifying the impoverishing effects of purchasing medicines: a cross-country comparison of the affordability of medicines in the developing worldQ33687205
Financial risks associated with healthcare consumption in Jinja, Uganda.Q33880021
Health financing reform in Uganda: How equitable is the proposed National Health Insurance scheme?Q34258482
Examining inequities in incidence of catastrophic health expenditures on different healthcare services and health facilities in NigeriaQ34345229
Equity and health sector reforms: can low-income countries escape the medical poverty trap?Q34374642
Catastrophic health care spending and impoverishment in KenyaQ34484051
The financial protection effect of Ghana National Health Insurance Scheme: evidence from a study in two rural districtsQ34540977
The economic burden of illness for households in developing countries: a review of studies focusing on malaria, tuberculosis, and human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndromeQ35872664
What are the economic consequences for households of illness and of paying for health care in low- and middle-income country contexts?Q36229066
Evidence is good for your health system: policy reform to remedy catastrophic and impoverishing health spending in MexicoQ36657036
Discontinuation of cost sharing in UgandaQ36980181
Universal coverage of health services: tailoring its implementationQ37113189
Beyond fragmentation and towards universal coverage: Insights from Ghana, south africa and the united republic of TanzaniaQ37113246
Utilization of public or private health care providers by febrile children after user fee removal in UgandaQ37134022
Abolition of user fees: the Uganda paradoxQ38869082
Understanding the impact of eliminating user fees: utilization and catastrophic health expenditures in UgandaQ38880516
Abolition of cost-sharing is pro-poor: evidence from UgandaQ38881171
Equity in financing and use of health care in Ghana, South Africa, and Tanzania: implications for paths to universal coverageQ39251919
Are malaria treatment expenditures catastrophic to different socio-economic and geographic groups and how do they cope with payment? A study in southeast NigeriaQ39325500
Reassessing catastrophic health-care payments with a Nigerian case studyQ42689946
Household catastrophic health expenditures: a comparative analysis of twelve Latin American and Caribbean CountriesQ43708702
Universal health care and the removal of user feesQ45219779
Catastrophe and impoverishment in paying for health care: with applications to Vietnam 1993–1998Q47402232
Household catastrophic health expenditure: a multicountry analysisQ47754989
Catastrophic payments for health care in AsiaQ47872382
Payments for health care and its effect on catastrophe and impoverishment: experience from the transition to Universal Coverage in ThailandQ50118849
Mutual health insurance in Rwanda: Evidence on access to care and financial risk protectionQ50126676
P275copyright licenseCreative Commons Attribution 2.0 GenericQ19125117
P6216copyright statuscopyrightedQ50423863
P921main subjectUgandaQ1036
P304page(s)30
P577publication date2015-01-22
P1433published inBMC Health Services ResearchQ4835946
P1476titleAssessing catastrophic and impoverishing effects of health care payments in Uganda
P478volume15

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cites work (P2860)
Q47136529"Helping my neighbour is like giving a loan…" -the role of social relations in chronic illness in rural Uganda.
Q48140087An assessment of financial catastrophe and impoverishment from out-of-pocket health care payments in Swaziland.
Q30382886Catastrophic health expenditure and impoverishment in Mongolia
Q57137262Combined social and private health insurance versus catastrophic out of pocket payments for private hospital care in Greece
Q35900268Does User Fee Removal Policy Provide Financial Protection from Catastrophic Health Care Payments? Evidence from Zambia
Q64061086Hardship financing of out-of-pocket payments in the context of free healthcare in Zambia
Q64275438Incidence, socio-economic inequalities and determinants of catastrophic health expenditure and impoverishment for diabetes care in South Africa: a study at two public hospitals in Tshwane
Q57497898Out-of-Pocket Payments, Catastrophic Health Expenditure and Poverty Among Households in Nigeria 2010
Q56912060Out-of-Pocket and Catastrophic Expenses Incurred by Seeking Pediatric and Adult Surgical Care at a Public, Tertiary Care Centre in Uganda
Q36119250The economic burden of chronic non-communicable diseases in rural Malawi: an observational study
Q58751306Understanding variations in catastrophic health expenditure, its underlying determinants and impoverishment in Sub-Saharan African countries: a scoping review

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