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65pc of healthcare needs unmet as out-of-pocket costs soar: BIDS

Nearly two-thirds of Bangladeshis who needed healthcare in 2024 could not access it, largely because of high out-of-pocket costs, according to a study by the Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies (BIDS).

The study, presented at the institute’s office in Dhaka recently, found that 22 percent of the population reported a monthly need for healthcare.

Of them, 15 percent experienced unmet need, equivalent to over 65 percent of total need going unaddressed.

Unmet need was higher in rural areas (68 percent) than in urban areas (59 percent). By district, it was highest in Narail (81 percent) and Habiganj (80 percent), and lowest in Feni (18 percent).

Out-of-pocket costs refer to what patients pay directly from their own money, not covered by insurance or government programmes, including fees, medicines, and diagnostic tests.

The study says that such expenditure on healthcare has risen “alarmingly” in Bangladesh, from 55.9 percent in 1997 to 68.5 percent in 2020, and now stands at 79.3 percent — the highest in South Asia.

By comparison, the figure is 59 percent in Nepal, 54 percent in Sri Lanka, 52.9 percent in Pakistan, 43.9 percent in India, 25.5 percent in Bhutan, and 18 percent in the Maldives.

The study found that on average, Bangladeshi households spent Tk 3,454 per month on healthcare in 2024, accounting for 11 percent of total household expenditure. Medicines and diagnostic services were the largest cost drivers.

The study drew on data from the Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2022, covering 14,400 households and 62,387 individuals.