Predictors of Economic Burden
Cross-source consensus on Predictors of Economic Burden from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
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Highlighted claims
- Income was one of the strongest predictors of catastrophic expenditure. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Poor-income patients were 9.19 times more likely than high-income patients to experience economic burden. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Middle-income patients were 2.98 times more likely than high-income patients to experience economic burden. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Patients diagnosed less than 5 years earlier had lower odds of economic burden than those diagnosed for more than 10 years. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
- Lower-income patients faced greater odds of catastrophic expenditure because out-of-pocket spending consumed a larger share of household income. — Diabetes-related treatment costs and catastrophic health expenditure at a tertiary care hospital in Rajshahi, Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study