Costs of oral disease care are among the most expensive health care cost. In Senegal, more than 20% of most health insurance companies’ healthcare expenditure goes to dental care. A survey, which focused on the financial access to dental care through health insurance in Senegal, was carried out nationwide. The results show that 48.7% of surveyed heads of household have less than 50,000 FCFA monthly incomes, 41% of them have no knowledge of health insurance and only 14.3% are insured by mutual. While more than half of those mutual cover conservative care (51.2%) and extractions (53.5%), they do not for prostheses. Because health insurance partially covers dental care, whereas oral health care are very expensive, insurers and dental surgeons must join forces to contain the expenditure through awareness of community solidarity.
Published in | Science Journal of Public Health (Volume 5, Issue 5) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11 |
Page(s) | 359-364 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2017. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Oral Care, Health Insurance, Senegal, Africa
[1] | World Dental Federation. Conduire le monde a une santé bucco-dentaire optimale, La Vision 2020 de la FDI. Une prospection surl’avenir de la santé bucco-dentaire 2011. |
[2] | ANSD. L’Enquête de Suivi de la Pauvreté au Sénégal 2005– 2006, MEF/ANSD, Août 2007, 1–89. |
[3] | Sow, M., Diop, M., Mbengue, A., Aw, A., Sall, FL., Cissé, A., Rapport d’analyse sur les dépenses catastrophiques de santé et leur impact sur l’appauvrissement et l’utilisation des services au Sénégal 2005 et 2011. African Health Monitor 2013. |
[4] | Dussault, G., Fournier, P., Letourmy, A. L’Assurance maladie en Afrique francophone: Améliorer l’accès aux soins et lutter contre la pauvreté, la banque mondiale Washington, DC. 2006. |
[5] | Editorial: The struggle for universal health coverage. Lancet 2012, 380: 859. |
[6] | Robert E, Ridde V. les paiements directs dans les pays à faible et moyen revenu ne font plus l’unanimité au sein de la communauté internationale. Cahiers du CIRDIS Collection recherche. 2012, N3 |
[7] | World Health Organization. Oral health surveys: basic methods, WHO 1997 4th. ed. |
[8] | Ministère de la Sante et de l’action Sociale. Plan stratégique de développement de la Couverture Maladie Universelle au Sénégal. 2013-2017. 2013. |
[9] | Ministère de l’Economie, des Finances et du Plan du Sénégal. Agence Nationale de la Statistique et de la Démographie, Recensement Général de la Population et de l’Habitat, de l’Agriculture et de l’Elevage (RGPHAE 2013). 2014. |
[10] | Programme Alimentaire Mondiale. Evaluation approfondie de la sécurité alimentaire des ménages dans 170 communes déclarées à risque d’insécurité alimentaire au Burkina Faso. 2012. |
[11] | Agoudavi K. Ministère de la santé Togo. Rapport final de l’enquête STEPS Togo 2010. 2012. |
[12] | Carrin G, Waelkens MP, et Criel B. Community‐based health insurance in developing countries: a study of its contribution to the performance of health financing systems. Trop Med Int. Health. 2005; 10(8): 799-811. |
[13] | Vincelet C, Azogui-Lévy S, Grémy I. Etat bucco-dentaire et recours aux soins préventifs et curatifs de la population francilienne adulte. Observatoire régional de santé d'Ile-de-France, Ile-de-France. 2008: 112 p. |
[14] | Inoua A, Musango L. La Caisse nationale d’assurance maladie et de garantie sociale du Gabon: un chemin vers la couverture universelle. African Health Monitor. 2013; 17(2): 15-19. |
[15] | Musango L, Inoua A. Assurance maladie au Gabon: Un atout pour le bien être de la population. 2010; 11(3): 45-47. |
[16] | Haddad S, Nougtara A, Ridde V. Les inégalités d’accès aux services de santé et leurs déterminants au Burkina Faso. Santé, sociétéetsolidarité. 2004; 3(2): 199-210. |
[17] | Musango L, Doetinchem O et Carrin G. De la mutualisation au risque maladie à l’assurance maladie universelle: Experience du RWANDA. 2009; 27(2): 112-118. |
[18] | LoCMM, Cisse D, Faye D et al. Accessibilité financière des soins bucco-dentaires aux populations du département de Thiès. Rev. Col. Odonto-Stomatol. Afr. Chir. Maxillo-Fac. 2009; 16: 41-45. |
[19] | Basaza R, Criel B, Van Der Stuyft P. Community health insurance in Uganda: Why does enrolment remain low? A view from beneath, Health Policy. 2008; 87(2): 172-184. |
[20] | Faye D, Cissé D, Diouf M, Kanouté A, Baldé YS. Part des dépenses des soins buccodentaires dans les dépenses de santé des institutions de protection sociale du Sénégal. Cahier de santé publique. 2012; 11(2): 40-46. |
[21] | Lo CMM, Cissé D, Diouf M et al. Prise en charge de la prothèse dentaire par les mutuelles de santé de la région de Dakar: revue col odonto-stomatolAfrchirMaxillo-fac. 2011; 18(14): 23-26. |
[22] | Kerak E, El Massaoui A, Imlahi A, Barrijal S. Étude de satisfaction des «clients» d’un organisme gestionnaire d’assurance maladie Au Maroc. Assurances et gestion des risques. 2007; 75(3): 391-408. |
[23] | Criel B, Blaise P, Ferette D. Mutuelles de santé en Afrique et qualité des soins dans les services: une interaction dynamique, in Dussault G., Fournier P., Letourmy A. (eds.) 2006; 12(2): 353-372. |
[24] | Masood M, Sheiham A, Bernabé E. A. PLoS One. 2015; 10(4): e0123075. |
[25] | Kutzin J, Sparkes SP. System strengthening, universal coverage, health security and resilience. Bull World Health Organ.2 016. 1; 94(1): 2. |
APA Style
Diop Mbathio, Kanouté Aida, Diouf Massamba, Ndiaye Amadou Diaw, Lo Cheikh Mouhamadou Mbacké, et al. (2017). Financial Access to Dental Care Through Health Insurance in Senegal. Science Journal of Public Health, 5(5), 359-364. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11
ACS Style
Diop Mbathio; Kanouté Aida; Diouf Massamba; Ndiaye Amadou Diaw; Lo Cheikh Mouhamadou Mbacké, et al. Financial Access to Dental Care Through Health Insurance in Senegal. Sci. J. Public Health 2017, 5(5), 359-364. doi: 10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11
AMA Style
Diop Mbathio, Kanouté Aida, Diouf Massamba, Ndiaye Amadou Diaw, Lo Cheikh Mouhamadou Mbacké, et al. Financial Access to Dental Care Through Health Insurance in Senegal. Sci J Public Health. 2017;5(5):359-364. doi: 10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11
@article{10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11, author = {Diop Mbathio and Kanouté Aida and Diouf Massamba and Ndiaye Amadou Diaw and Lo Cheikh Mouhamadou Mbacké and Faye Daouda and Cissé Daouda}, title = {Financial Access to Dental Care Through Health Insurance in Senegal}, journal = {Science Journal of Public Health}, volume = {5}, number = {5}, pages = {359-364}, doi = {10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.sjph.20170505.11}, abstract = {Costs of oral disease care are among the most expensive health care cost. In Senegal, more than 20% of most health insurance companies’ healthcare expenditure goes to dental care. A survey, which focused on the financial access to dental care through health insurance in Senegal, was carried out nationwide. The results show that 48.7% of surveyed heads of household have less than 50,000 FCFA monthly incomes, 41% of them have no knowledge of health insurance and only 14.3% are insured by mutual. While more than half of those mutual cover conservative care (51.2%) and extractions (53.5%), they do not for prostheses. Because health insurance partially covers dental care, whereas oral health care are very expensive, insurers and dental surgeons must join forces to contain the expenditure through awareness of community solidarity.}, year = {2017} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Financial Access to Dental Care Through Health Insurance in Senegal AU - Diop Mbathio AU - Kanouté Aida AU - Diouf Massamba AU - Ndiaye Amadou Diaw AU - Lo Cheikh Mouhamadou Mbacké AU - Faye Daouda AU - Cissé Daouda Y1 - 2017/07/31 PY - 2017 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11 DO - 10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11 T2 - Science Journal of Public Health JF - Science Journal of Public Health JO - Science Journal of Public Health SP - 359 EP - 364 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2328-7950 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.sjph.20170505.11 AB - Costs of oral disease care are among the most expensive health care cost. In Senegal, more than 20% of most health insurance companies’ healthcare expenditure goes to dental care. A survey, which focused on the financial access to dental care through health insurance in Senegal, was carried out nationwide. The results show that 48.7% of surveyed heads of household have less than 50,000 FCFA monthly incomes, 41% of them have no knowledge of health insurance and only 14.3% are insured by mutual. While more than half of those mutual cover conservative care (51.2%) and extractions (53.5%), they do not for prostheses. Because health insurance partially covers dental care, whereas oral health care are very expensive, insurers and dental surgeons must join forces to contain the expenditure through awareness of community solidarity. VL - 5 IS - 5 ER -