Financial Burden of Drug-sensitive Tuberculosis in India: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis
Subba Krishna Nagaraj, K. S. Aviraj, Renu Agrawal, Mittal Rathod, Mehul Kaliya
Preventive Medicine Research & Reviews · 2026-03
Abstract
Abstract Introduction: Tuberculosis (TB) poses a significant public health and economic burden in India, with out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) often leading to financial distress. This study reviews and meta-analyses costs associated with drug-sensitive TB care in India. Methods: Relevant studies from PubMed, Scopus, OpenAlex, CrossRef and Semantic Scholar were analysed. A random-effects meta-analysis estimated mean costs, including direct medical, direct non-medical, indirect medical, diagnostic and treatment expenses. Results: Analysing 18 studies, the overall mean cost per TB patient was ₹18,961 (95% confidence interval: ₹12,093–₹25,829), with direct medical costs at ₹7305, direct non-medical costs at ₹2346, indirect medical costs at ₹10,602, diagnostic costs at ₹10,028 and treatment costs at ₹12,999. Conclusion: TB care imposes a heavy financial burden on Indian households. Reducing OOPE through targeted interventions, strengthened social protection and expanded free services is essential to alleviate this hardship.
MeSH terms
- Indirect costs
- Medicine
- Medical costs
- Health care
- Public health
- Cost–benefit analysis
- Finance
- Direct cost
- Tuberculosis
- Health economics
- Actuarial science
- Business
- Environmental health
- Economic cost
- Disease burden
- Medical care
- Burden of disease
- Total cost
- MEDLINE
- Social cost
- Medical economics