Abstract

The study investigates the association between tobacco and alcohol use, and the potential risk of impoverishment from borrowing and distress selling of assets for meeting costs of hospitalization in India. Data from the fifty-second round of the National Sample Survey, a representative survey of 120 942 households across India, were used to investigate the likelihood and the levels of borrowing and distress selling of assets to cover hospitalization expenditures among regular users of tobacco and/or alcohol, non-users from households where there was use, and non-users from households with no use. The data were analyzed by bivariate comparisons and multivariate logistic and ordinary least square regression.

The study found a higher risk of borrowing/distress selling during hospitalization for individuals who use tobacco (OR 1.35, p < 0.05), who were non-users but belong to households that use tobacco (OR 1.38, p < 0.05), and non-users from households that use both tobacco and alcohol (OR 1.51, p < 0.05), even after controlling for socio-economic and demographic factors. The same groups also met a higher percentage of hospitalization expenditures through borrowing/distress selling of assets. The adjusted population-attributable risk proportion of borrowing/distress selling to meet hospital expenditures for tobacco and alcohol use was 16%.

The study suggests that there is an association between use of tobacco and alcohol, and impoverishment through borrowing and distress selling of assets due to costs of hospitalization. While reduction of poverty is the overarching goal of developing countries and multilateral development organizations, very little is mentioned about control of tobacco and alcohol in the framework of development. It might be necessary to include strategies for control of tobacco and alcohol in the larger framework of poverty reduction.

Author notes

1Asian Development Bank, Manila, Philippines (study conducted while on study leave at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health), 2World Health Organization, Manila, Philippines (study conducted while on study leave at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health), 3Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA, 4Centre for Global Health Research, St Michael's Hospital and Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto, Canada, 5International Tobacco Evidence Network, University of Toronto, Canada and 6World Bank, Washington, DC, USA