Publication: Do chronic illnesses and poverty go hand in hand?
Type:
Article
Date
2020-10-23
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Abstract
In the global context, the health and quality of life of people are adversely affected by either
one or more types of chronic diseases. The chronic pain associated with diagnosed patients
may include heavy medical expenditure along with the physical and mental suffering they
undergo. Usually, unbearable amounts of medical expenses are incurred, to improve or sustain the health condition of the patient. Consequently, the heavy financial burden tends to
push households from a comfortable or secure life, or even from bad to worse, towards the
probability of becoming poor. Hence, this study is conducted to identify the impact chronic illnesses have on poverty using data from a national survey referred as the Household
Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES), with data gathered by the Department of Census
and Statistics (DCS) of Sri Lanka in 2016. As such, this study is the first of its kind in Sri
Lanka, declaring the originality of the study based on data collected from the local arena.
Accordingly, the study discovered that married females who do not engage in any type of
economic activity, in the age category of 40–65, having an educational level of tertiary level
or below and living in the urban sector have a higher likelihood of suffering from chronic diseases. Moreover, it was inferred that, if a person is deprived from access to basic education
in the level of education, lives in the rural or estate sector, or suffers from a brain disease,
cancer, heart disease or kidney disease, he is highly likely to be poor. Some insights concluded from this Sri Lankan case study can also be applied in the context of other developing
countries, to minimise chronic illnesses and thereby the probability of falling into poverty.
