| From : | HABICHT, Triin <habichtt@who.int> |
| To : | THOMSON, Sarah <thomsons@who.int>; Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge> |
| Subject : | RE: [EXT] Re: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending |
| Cc : | GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro <jogarcia@who.int>; mamnadar@gmail.com |
| Received On : | 22.06.2020 13:47 |
Hi all,
I think having rural/urban and economic activity (not only employment related) would be good. No any additional ideas from my side.
Best
Triin
From: THOMSON, Sarah
Sent: Monday, June 22, 2020 3:26 PM
To: Ketevan Goginashvili
Cc: GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Thanks Keti and Jorge.
Yes, it would be good to see what categories are available for economic activity – eg does it include social beneficiaries?
Triin, are there any other variables you think would be useful for disaggregation?
From: GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro
Sent: Monday, 22 June 2020 15:22
To: Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge>; THOMSON, Sarah <thomsons@who.int>;
mamnadar@gmail.com
Cc: HABICHT, Triin <habichtt@who.int>
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Dear Ketevan,
I think urban/rural disaggregation would be very helpful. Would you be able to run the analysis and send us the charts? what would you prefer?
On the age and household economic activity, perhaps would be good to discuss how would we disaggregate the analysis with these variables. What do you think @THOMSON,
Sarah? Maybe it would be good to see which categories are available for the economic activity (self- employed, manual worker, non-manual worker, unemployed, retired fr instance).
Thank you for keeping us updated, Ketevan
Best wishes
Jorge Alejandro
_________________________________________________________
Jorge Alejandro García Ramírez
Medical Doctor, MSc Health Policy, Planning and Financing
Consultant at the WHO Barcelona Office for Health Systems Strengthening
Barcelona, Spain
From: Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge>
Sent: Monday, June 22, 2020 12:55 PM
To: GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro <jogarcia@who.int>; THOMSON, Sarah <thomsons@who.int>;
mamnadar@gmail.com <mamnadar@gmail.com>
Cc: HABICHT, Triin <habichtt@who.int>
Subject: RE: [EXT] Re: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Dear
Jorge Alejandro,
Disaggregation by rural and urban is available, by age we need For age/gender, also household economic activity we need additional data from Geostat.
Also we will check availability to send you data base.
With best regards, Keti
From: GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro [mailto:jogarcia@who.int]
Sent: 17 June, 2020 12:31
To: Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge>; THOMSON, Sarah <thomsons@who.int>;
mamnadar@gmail.com
Cc: HABICHT, Triin <habichtt@who.int>
Subject: Re: [EXT] Re: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Dear Ketevan and Mamuka,
I wanted to follow-up on this email. Have you been able to check the available socioeconomic variables for disaggregating the FP analysis for Georgia?
If needed, I could help with the analysis if I had the access to the data
Best wishes,
Jorge Alejandro
_________________________________________________________
Jorge Alejandro García Ramírez
Medical Doctor, MSc Health Policy, Planning and Financing
Consultant at the WHO Barcelona Office for Health Systems Strengthening
Barcelona, Spain
From: Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge>
Sent: Thursday, June 4, 2020 2:08 AM
To: THOMSON, Sarah <thomsons@who.int>;
mamnadar@gmail.com <mamnadar@gmail.com>
Cc: GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro <jogarcia@who.int>; HABICHT, Triin <habichtt@who.int>
Subject: [EXT] Re: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Dear Sarah,
Thank you for your support. Mamuka and me will discuss the capabilities of the database and we will get back to you soon.
With best regards, Keti
From:
Sarah THOMSON <thomsons@who.int>
Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 16:04
To: Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge>, Mamuka Nadareishvili <mamnadar@gmail.com>
Cc: Jorge GARCIA <jogarcia@who.int>, Triin HABICHT <habichtt@who.int>
Subject: RE: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Dear Keti and Mamuka
Thanks to you both for updating the analysis to include the 2017 and 2018 data.
In follow up to Jorge’s email, it would be great if we could disaggregate households with catastrophic health spending using socioeconomic factors in addition to household consumption quintiles.
In other countries, we have used:
·
urban-rural
·
household structure (eg single person household, household with no children, household with children, household with x children etc)
·
age / gender of the head of the household
·
household economic activity or sources of income (eg employed, unemployed, pensioner, social beneficiary etc)
·
health insurance status (eg with voluntary health insurance or not, type of entitlement to publicly financed health care etc)
You will know what the household budget survey in Georgia permits us to look at.
I also copy Triin, who is currently reviewing the report, in case she has ideas of the types of categories it might be good to capture in Georgia.
When you do the analysis, it is good to produce two types of analysis: a) the breakdown of all households with catastrophic health spending by category and b) the incidence of catastrophic health spending within different categories.
With thanks and best wishes
Sarah
From: GARCIA, Jorge Alejandro
Sent: Wednesday, 3 June 2020 12:36
To: Ketevan Goginashvili <kgoginashvili@moh.gov.ge>;
mamnadar@gmail.com; THOMSON, Sarah <thomsons@who.int>
Subject: Georgia FP report: disaggregated analysis for catastrophic spending
Dear Ketevan and Mamuka
As commented before, I have been working with Sarah on updating the FP figures for the Georgia country report. I managed to produce new figures (attached) and we were wondering if you could help
us with something:
Would you be able to produce Fig. 21 (in the excel file) to break down the cata households by socioeconomic variables eg urban rural, age structure, any other variable available? This would
really add value to the analysis and the report. See an example of the intended figure in Fig 19 of
this report for Moldova
Do you have the microdata available? which socioeconomic variables for disaggregation would be available?
Thanks in advance for your answer, have a good day
Jorge Alejandro
_________________________________________________________
Jorge Alejandro García Ramírez
Medical Doctor, MSc Health Policy, Planning and Financing
Consultant at the WHO Barcelona Office for Health Systems Strengthening
Barcelona, Spain