Keith Tin
University of Hong Kong
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Publication
Featured researches published by Keith Tin.
The Lancet | 2006
Eddy van Doorslaer; Owen O'Donnell; Ravi P. Rannan-Eliya; Aparnaa Somanathan; Shiva Raj Adhikari; Charu C. Garg; Deni Harbianto; Alejandro N. Herrin; Mohammed N. Huq; Shamsia Ibragimova; Anup Karan; Chiu Wan Ng; Badri Raj Pande; Rachel H. Racelis; Sihai Tao; Keith Tin; Kanjana Tisayaticom; Laksono Trisnantoro; Chitpranee Vasavid; Yuxin Zhao
BACKGROUND Conventional estimates of poverty do not take account of out-of-pocket payments to finance health care. We aimed to reassess measures of poverty in 11 low-to-middle income countries in Asia by calculating total household resources both with and without out-of-pocket payments for health care. METHODS We obtained data on payments for health care from nationally representative surveys, and subtracted these payments from total household resources. We then calculated the number of individuals with less than the internationally accepted threshold of absolute poverty (US1 dollar per head per day) after making health payments. We also assessed the effect of health-care payments on the poverty gap--the amount by which household resources fell short of the 1 dollar poverty line in these countries. FINDINGS Our estimate of the overall prevalence of absolute poverty in these countries was 14% higher than conventional estimates that do not take account of out-of-pocket payments for health care. We calculated that an additional 2.7% of the population under study (78 million people) ended up with less than 1 dollar per day after they had paid for health care. In Bangladesh, China, India, Nepal, and Vietnam, where more than 60% of health-care costs are paid out-of-pocket by households, our estimates of poverty were much higher than conventional figures, ranging from an additional 1.2% of the population in Vietnam to 3.8% in Bangladesh. INTERPRETATION Out-of-pocket health payments exacerbate poverty. Policies to reduce the number of Asians living on less than 1 dollar per day need to include measures to reduce such payments.
Journal of Health Economics | 2008
Owen O'Donnell; Eddy van Doorslaer; Ravi P. Rannan-Eliya; Aparnaa Somanathan; Shiva Raj Adhikari; Baktygul Akkazieva; Deni Harbianto; Charu C. Garg; Piya Hanvoravongchai; Alejandro N. Herrin; Mohammed N. Huq; Shamsia Ibragimova; Anup Karan; Soonman Kwon; Gabriel M. Leung; Jui-fen Rachel Lu; Yasushi Ohkusa; Badri Raj Pande; Rachel H. Racelis; Keith Tin; Kanjana Tisayaticom; Laksono Trisnantoro; Quan Wan; Bong-Min Yang; Yuxin Zhao
We estimate the distributional incidence of health care financing in 13 Asian territories that account for 55% of the Asian population. In all territories, higher-income households contribute more to the financing of health care. The better-off contribute more as a proportion of ability to pay in most low- and lower-middle-income territories. Health care financing is slightly regressive in three high-income economies with universal social insurance. Direct taxation is the most progressive source of finance and is most so in poorer economies. In universal systems, social insurance is proportional to regressive. In high-income economies, the out-of-pocket (OOP) payments are proportional or regressive while in low-income economies the better-off spend relatively more OOP. But in most low-/middle-income countries, the better-off not only pay more, they also get more health care.
Medical Education | 2003
Janice M. Johnston; Gabriel M. Leung; Keith Tin; Lai-Ming Ho
Objectives Most evidence‐based practice (EBP) educational assessment tools evaluated to date have focused on specific knowledge components or technical skills. Other important potential barriers to the adoption of EBP, such as attitudinal, perceptual and behavioural factors, have yet to be studied, especially in the undergraduate setting. Therefore, we developed and validated a knowledge, attitude and behaviour questionnaire designed to evaluate EBP teaching and learning in an undergraduate medical curriculum.
Medical Education | 2004
Janice M. Johnston; Gabriel M. Leung; Keith Tin; Lai-Ming Ho; Wendy Wing Tak Lam
Introduction Handheld computers (PDAs) uploaded with clinical decision support software (CDSS) have the potential to facilitate the adoption of evidence‐based medicine (EBM) at the point‐of‐care among undergraduate medical students. Further evaluation of the usefulness and acceptability of these tools is required.
Medical Education | 2004
Wendy Wing Tak Lam; Roger A. Fielding; Janice M. Johnston; Keith Tin; Gabriel M. Leung
Objective To identify and explore common barriers to the adoption of evidence‐based medicine (EBM) practice in the undergraduate setting.
Health Economics | 2009
Gabriel M. Leung; Keith Tin; Owen O'Donnell
We examine the distributional characteristics of Hong Kongs mixed public-private health system to identify the net redistribution achieved through public spending on health care, compare the income-related inequality and inequity of public and private care and measure horizontal inequity in health-care delivery overall. Payments for public care are highly concentrated on the better-off whereas benefits are pro-poor. As a consequence, public health care effects significant net redistribution from the rich to the poor. Public care is skewed towards the poor in part not only because of allocation according to need but also because the rich opt out of the public sector and consume most of the private care. Overall, there is horizontal inequity favouring the rich in general outpatient care and (very marginally) inpatient care. Pro-rich bias in the distribution of private care outweighs the pro-poor bias of public care. A lesser role for private finance may improve horizontal equity of utilisation but would also reduce the degree of net redistribution through the public sector.
Social Science & Medicine | 2010
C. Mary Schooling; Elaine W.L. Lau; Keith Tin; Gabriel M. Leung
Social patterning of disease is pervasive and persistent. Disease patterns change with economic development and the attendant epidemiological transition. It is becoming evident that social patterns of disease are epidemiologically stage specific. In a population with a recent history of rapid economic development we examined social patterns of all-cause and cause-specific mortality over time to elucidate how economic development impacts disparities in health. We used concentration indices to provide a summary measure of disparities by income in potential years of life lost (PYLL) for the Hong Kong population from 1976 to 2006. For all-cause mortality and for each of the specific causes considered the concentration curve in 2006 dominated the 1976 concentration curve. The concentration index for all-cause PYLL was negligible in 1976, but increased over the period. PYLL attributable to injury and poisoning was fairly consistently associated with lower income, but PYLL attributable to cardiovascular diseases and cancer reversed from an association with higher income in 1976 to an association with lower income in 2006. Social disparities in health are not universal or homogeneous in origin. Attention should be focused on disease-specific causes of disparities, so that contextually specific prevention strategies can be implemented. This is of particular relevance to China and other emerging economies where there may be a window of opportunity to prevent disparities in cancer and cardiovascular diseases occurring.
Epidemiology | 2007
Gabriel M. Leung; Ho Lm; Keith Tin; Cm Schooling; Th Lam
Objective: Elective cesarean delivery is increasingly common. The potential effects of surgical delivery in an unselected sample of infants beyond the immediate neonatal period remain poorly defined. Methods: We carried out an 18-month follow-up of a population-based cohort of 8327 Hong Kong Chinese infants born in 1997. The main outcome measures were utilization of outpatient visits and hospitalizations, categorized by doctor-diagnosed causes as reported by parents. Results: Among term singleton infants, there was no association of cesarean (compared with vaginal) birth with subsequent hospital admission (adjusted odds ratio = 0.92; 95% confidence interval = 0.79–1.08) or with above versus below the median number of outpatient episodes (1.10; 0.96–1.26) in the first 18 months of life. There were weak positive associations with afebrile gastrointestinal, respiratory, skin and a few other conditions. Conclusion: Cesarean birth is not associated with hospitalization or outpatient care overall during the first 18 months after adjustment for confounders. We cannot rule out isolated associations with minor morbidities.
Annals of Epidemiology | 2012
Elaine W. Lau; C. Mary Schooling; Keith Tin; Gabriel M. Leung
PURPOSE Life expectancy is strongly related to national income, whether there is an additional contribution of income inequality is unclear. METHODS We used negative binomial regression to examine the association of neighborhood-level Gini, adjusted for age, sex, and income, with mortality rates in Hong Kong from 1976 to 2006. RESULTS The association of neighborhood Gini with all-cause mortality varied over time (p-value for interaction < .01). Neighborhood Gini was positively associated with nonmedical mortality in 1976 to 1986; incident rate ratio (IRR) 1.09, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.02-1.16 per 0.1 change and in 1991 to 2006, IRR 1.24, 95% CI 1.13-1.36, adjusted for age, sex and absolute income. Similarly adjusted, Gini was not associated with all-cause mortality in 1976 to 1986 (IRR 0.96, 95% CI 0.93-1.00) but was in 1991 to 2006 (IRR 1.25, 95% CI 1.20-1.29), when Gini was also positively associated with death from cardiovascular diseases, respiratory diseases and some cancers. CONCLUSIONS Independent of income, income inequality was positively associated with nonmedical mortality rates at a low level of spatial aggregation, indicating the consistent harms of social disharmony. However, the impact on medical mortality was less consistent, suggesting the relevance of contextual factors.
Quality & Safety in Health Care | 2010
Ssc Chan; Irene Oi Ling Wong; Keith Tin; Fung Ay; Janice M. Johnston; Gabriel M. Leung
Objective To measure self-reported inpatient experience in Hong Kong. Design Data were derived from the 2005 Thematic Household Survey. Setting and participants 24 364 non-institutional and 3390 institutionalised respondents aged at least 18 years systematically drawn to represent the Hong Kong adult population, 6.9% of whom were admitted at least once as an inpatient during the previous 12 months. Data from this group was analysed. Main outcome measure Picker Patient Experience Questionnaire-15. Results Overall, respondents scored their last inpatient episode 39.6 (range=0–100, the lower the score, the better the patient experience). Patients who sought care from private hospitals reported a lower Picker Patient Experience Questionnaire-15 score than those cared for in public facilities (31.1 vs 41.8 respectively, p<0.001). We observed substantial differences between public hospital geographic clusters that were confirmed by multivariable regression. When benchmarked against the UK, Germany and the USA, Hong Kong patients tended to report a significantly higher number of problems. Conclusions We found systematic differences between the level of satisfaction and type of problems reported by Hong Kong Chinese compared to those in Euro-American settings. The observed heterogeneities among different public hospitals, between the private and public sectors, and among subgroups of inpatients should provide an evidence based on which quality improvement initiatives can be designed and evaluated.