Allin Sara, Masseria Cristina, Mossialos Elias
LSE Health, London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London, England.
Am J Public Health. 2009 Oct;99(10):1849-55. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2008.141499. Epub 2009 Jan 15.
We compared the extent of socioeconomic differences in use of health care services based on wealth (i.e., accumulated assets) as the socioeconomic ranking variable with the extent of differences based on income to explore the sensitivity of the estimates of equity to the choice of the socioeconomic indicator.
We used data from the Health and Retirement Study in the United States and the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe to estimate levels of income- and wealth-related disparity in use of physician and dental services among adults 50 or older in 12 countries.
We found socioeconomic differences in use of physician services after standardizing for need in about half of the countries studied. No consistent pattern in levels of disparity measured by wealth versus those measured by income was found. However, the rich were significantly more likely to use dental services in all countries. Wealth-related differences in dental service use were consistently higher than were income-related differences.
We found some support for wealth as a more sensitive indicator of socioeconomic status among older adults than was income. Wealth may thus allow more accurate measurements of socioeconomic differences in use of health care services for this population.
我们将基于财富(即累积资产)作为社会经济排名变量的医疗服务使用方面的社会经济差异程度,与基于收入的差异程度进行比较,以探究公平性估计对社会经济指标选择的敏感性。
我们使用来自美国健康与退休研究以及欧洲健康、老龄化与退休调查的数据,来估计12个国家中50岁及以上成年人在使用医生和牙科服务方面与收入和财富相关的差距水平。
在约一半的研究国家中,我们发现在对需求进行标准化后,使用医生服务存在社会经济差异。未发现以财富衡量的差距水平与以收入衡量的差距水平之间存在一致模式。然而,在所有国家中,富人使用牙科服务的可能性显著更高。与财富相关的牙科服务使用差异始终高于与收入相关的差异。
我们发现一些证据支持财富比收入更能敏感地反映老年人的社会经济地位。因此,财富可能使我们能更准确地衡量该人群在医疗服务使用方面的社会经济差异。