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Healthcare policy and reform

Nepal’s 40% Out of Pocket Health Burden

Medically reviewed byProf. Dr. Kishor Adhikari, PhD, Public Health Researcher, Academician, and Epidemiologist
Published March 11, 2026Updated March 11, 2026

This article draws on Nepal’s 30th Annual Health Report and related public program data. Two findings from the Report anchor the analysis: “NCDs were responsible for 71.1% of deaths” and “out‑of‑pocket (OOP) expenditure on NCDs is reported at 40.3%.”

Nepal has made real gains over the past three decades: children survive at higher rates, maternal deaths have fallen, and life expectancy has risen. Yet those gains sit beside a painful paradox. Non‑communicable diseases now dominate mortality, and roughly four in ten NCD costs are paid directly by households. That 40% figure is not an abstract statistic; it is the difference between a family keeping their home or selling it to pay for long‑term medicines, between a child staying in school or being pulled out because of medical debt. For many people in remote Palikas, a diagnosis of hypertension or diabetes is rarely a single bill. It becomes a long series of small payments — intermittent medicines, missed follow‑ups because of travel costs — that cumulate into catastrophe when complications arrive.

The Report shows the problem is structural as much as clinical. Nepal’s Bipanna Nagarik Aushadhi Upachar program is visible and well funded, yet its design channels a disproportionate share of resources into facility‑based, high‑cost services such as dialysis. Those services are concentrated in tertiary hospitals and therefore generate large claims. Routine outpatient management of common chronic conditions — the long, steady care most people need — is largely outside the targeted package. The result is predictable: budgets follow where services exist, not where disease burden lies. A patient who can reach a dialysis center in Kathmandu may receive subsidized sessions; a woman in a remote Palika who pays for pills out of pocket for years receives no comparable protection until an emergency forces an expensive hospital admission. That mismatch turns a safety net into a lottery of geography.

Supply‑side fragility compounds the financing problem. Less than half of essential medicines are produced domestically, leaving the health system and households exposed to international price shocks and currency swings. When medicines become more expensive or scarce, households absorb the cost. The Department of Drug Administration inspects markets, but recalls are rare and legal tools for market surveillance remain weak. There is no dynamic price‑regulation mechanism that reliably shields consumers from sudden price rises. At the same time, the health workforce is unevenly distributed: sanctioned posts for consultants and physicians remain unfilled in remote provinces, many facilities lack basic sanitation, and long travel times push people toward private care or into skipping treatment altogether. These failures are linked: weak regulation, fragile supply chains, and uneven human resources turn clinical gains into financial vulnerability for the poorest.

The human consequences are immediate. A mother in Madhesh walks an hour to the nearest health post for antenatal care; the facility lacks a usable toilet and privacy, so she delays care and gives birth at home. When complications arise, the nearest hospital is hours away and the cost of referral care would push the family into debt. A farmer in Karnali buys medicines intermittently because of cost and distance; years later he suffers a stroke, the family sells livestock to pay for hospitalization, and the household’s income collapses. A dialysis patient in Kathmandu receives subsidized sessions through the Bipanna program, but that concentration of benefits means other chronic patients receive little support. These are not outliers; they are the lived consequences of policy choices documented in the Report.

Fixing this does not require a single grand gesture. It requires a compact, practical set of reforms that protect households now and build resilience for the future. First, reorient subsidy design so benefits reflect disease prevalence and socioeconomic vulnerability rather than the distribution of tertiary services. That could mean expanding Bipanna eligibility to cover advanced complications of common NCDs or creating a parallel chronic‑care package that subsidizes long‑term outpatient management and essential medicines. Second, strengthen primary health care: equip PHC teams and community health workers with clear protocols for screening, treatment initiation, adherence support, and referral. Strong primary care prevents progression to catastrophic stages and reduces costly hospital admissions. Third, tackle medicine affordability through pooled procurement and a price‑management approach that pairs price commitments with supplier contracts and buffer stocks to avoid shortages. Fourth, modernize regulation by updating legal frameworks to police online markets, enable rapid recalls, and invest in laboratory capacity for medicine quality testing and transparent public reporting. Finally, close human resource gaps with rural posting incentives, housing and career pathways, and stronger preservice and inservice training linked to licensure.

These measures reinforce one another. Better primary care reduces hospital demand; pooled procurement lowers unit costs; stronger regulation protects quality while digital systems provide the data to target resources where they reduce OOP fastest. The Report already points to digital tools — eLMIS, DHIS2, and mHealth — as essential to making federalism work. There are encouraging signs: timely eLMIS reporting has improved substantially, showing the potential of data to reduce stockouts and improve supply chains. But the digital divide is real: only a minority of facilities have dedicated communication equipment or reliable internet access. Any digital expansion must prioritize connectivity, training, and simple dashboards that publish Palika‑level indicators so citizens and local leaders can see progress.

Practical sequencing matters. Start with rapid, visible pilots in two to three provinces that combine interventions likely to reduce OOP quickly: pooled procurement for a core basket of NCD medicines, a primary‑care NCD package with CHW outreach, and targeted sanitation upgrades in high‑need hospitals. Use household‑facing metrics to judge success: the share of households reporting OOP spending for NCD care, stockout days for essential medicines, and the proportion of Palikas with functioning eLMIS reporting. Publish these indicators on public dashboards to create transparency and political pressure. Scale what works nationally while institutionalizing legal and budgetary changes — pooled procurement mechanisms, a reformed Bipanna benefit schedule, and strengthened DDA authority — over an 18–36-month horizon.

Anticipate trade‑offs and manage risks. Price caps without procurement safeguards can cause shortages; mitigate this by pairing price measures with long‑term supplier contracts and buffer stocks. Rapid digital rollouts can widen inequities if connectivity is uneven; prioritize remote Palikas for infrastructure and training. Reallocating visible subsidies will face political resistance; use phased implementation, clear needs‑based criteria, and public dashboards to build legitimacy. Financing will matter primary‑care strengthening and CHW scale are relatively low‑cost and high‑impact, while domestic pharmaceutical upgrades and regulatory modernization require medium‑term investment. A mix of reallocated budgets, modest earmarked levies, and catalytic donor support can bridge the gap while reforms demonstrate impact.

Success will not be a thicker report but fewer families selling assets to pay for chronic care, fewer children pulled from school because of medical debt, and fewer Palikas where a mother must walk hours only to find no clinician on duty. If the next Annual Health Report shows a meaningful drop in household OOP for NCDs, fewer stockout days for essential medicines, and wider primary‑care coverage for chronic disease, then Nepal’s constitutional promise of health as a right will be moving from paper into people’s lives. The choices ahead are political and moral as much as technical; the first step is to protect the everyday care that keeps families healthy and financially secure.

References (1)
  1. Annual Health Report (30th), Department/Ministry of Health and Population, Government of Nepal.

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About the Reviewer
Medically Reviewed By
Prof. Dr. Kishor Adhikari
Prof. Dr. Kishor Adhikari, PhD
Public Health Researcher, Academician, and Epidemiologist

Prof. Dr. Kishor Adhikari is a leading public health scholar specializing in epidemiology and the management of non-communicable diseases (NCDs). With a PhD from Sam Higginbottom University (India), Dr. Adhikari currently serves as a Professor at Chitwan Medical College and Teaching Hospital, where he bridges the gap between academic rigor and community health impact. As a prolific researcher and curriculum developer, he has led high-impact projects ranging from maternal health to geriatric bone health. Dr. Adhikari is a recognized mentor and research lead, dedicated to establishing international standards for public health education and policy in Nepal and the broader South Asian region.

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