Catastrophic healthcare expenditure and caregiver burden in pediatric chronic kidney disease — a mixed methods study from a low resource setting

Soumya Reddy, Nicole Scholes-Robertson, John Michael Raj, Priya Pais

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Caregivers of children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) in low resource settings must provide complex medical care at home while being burdened by treatment costs often paid out-of-pocket. We hypothesize that caregiver burden in our low resource setting is greater than reported from high income countries and is associated with frequent catastrophic healthcare expenditure (CHE).

Methods: We conducted a mixed-methods study of primary caregivers of children with advanced CKD (stage 3b–5) in our private-sector referral hospital in a low resource setting. We assessed caregiver burden using the Pediatric Renal Caregiver Burden Scale (PRCBS) and measured financial burden by calculating the proportion of caregivers who experienced CHE (monthly out-of-pocket healthcare expenditure exceeding 10% of total household monthly expenditure). We performed a qualitative reflexive thematic analysis of caregiver interviews to explore sources of burden.

Results: Of the 45 caregivers included, 35 (78%) had children on maintenance dialysis (25 PD, 10 HD). Mean caregiver burden score was 141 (± 17), greater than previously reported. On comparative analysis, PRCBS scores were higher among caregivers of children with kidney failure (p = 0.005), recent hospitalization (p = 0.03), non-earning caregivers (p = 0.02), caring for > 2 dependents (p = 0.009), and with high medical expenditure (p = 0.006). CHE occurred in 43 (96%) caregivers of whom 37 (82%) paid out-of-pocket. The main themes derived relating to caregiver burden were severe financial burden, mental stress and isolation, and perpetual burden of concern.

Conclusion: Parents of children with CKD experienced severe caregiver burden with frequent CHE and relentless financial stress indicating an imminent need for social support interventions. Graphical abstract: (Figure presented.)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3079-3093
Number of pages15
JournalPEDIATRIC NEPHROLOGY
Volume39
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Caregiver burden
  • Catastrophic healthcare expenditure
  • Dialysis
  • Low resource
  • Pediatric CKD
  • Qualitative analysis

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