Objectives: We aimed to determine the rate of catastrophic health expenditure incurred by women using maternal healthcare services at faith-based hospitals in Madagascar.

Design: This was a secondary analysis of programmatic data obtained from a non-governmental organisation.

Setting: Two faith-based, secondary-level hospitals located in rural communities in southern Madagascar.

Participants: All women using maternal healthcare services at the study hospitals between 1 March 2019 and 7 September 2020 were included (n=957 women).

Measures: We collected patient invoices and medical records of all participants. We then calculated the rate of catastrophic health expenditure relative to 10% and 25% of average annual household consumption in the study region.

Results: Overall, we found a high rate of catastrophic health expenditure (10% threshold: 486/890, 54.6%; 25% threshold: 366/890, 41.1%). Almost all women who required surgical care, most commonly a caesarean section, incurred catastrophic health expenditure (10% threshold: 279/280, 99.6%; 25% threshold: 279/280, 99.6%). The rate of catastrophic health expenditure among women delivering spontaneously was 5.7% (14/247; 10% threshold).

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that direct patient costs of managing pregnancy and birth-related complications at faith-based hospitals are likely to cause catastrophic health expenditure. Financial risk protection strategies for reducing out-of-pocket payments for maternal healthcare should include faith-based hospitals to improve health-seeking behaviour and ultimately achieve universal health coverage in Madagascar.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9036443PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-053823DOI Listing

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