Faculty of Health Sciences, Centre for Health Policy & Medical Research Council Health Policy Research Group, School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Private Bag X3, Wits, 2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
J Public Health Policy. 2011;32 Suppl 1:S102-23. doi: 10.1057/jphp.2011.35.
Achieving equitable universal health coverage requires the provision of accessible, necessary services for the entire population without imposing an unaffordable burden on individuals or households. In South Africa, little is known about access barriers to health care for the general population. We explore affordability, availability, and acceptability of services through a nationally representative household survey (n = 4668), covering utilization, health status, reasons for delaying care, perceptions and experiences of services, and health-care expenditure. Socio-economic status, race, insurance status, and urban-rural location were associated with access to care, with black Africans, poor, uninsured and rural respondents, experiencing greatest barriers. Understanding access barriers from the user perspective is important for expanding health-care coverage, both in South Africa and in other low- and middle-income countries.
实现公平的全民健康覆盖需要为全体人口提供可及、必要的服务,而不会给个人或家庭带来无法承受的负担。在南非,人们对一般人群获得医疗保健的障碍知之甚少。我们通过一项全国代表性的家庭调查(n=4668)来探讨服务的可负担性、可及性和可接受性,涵盖了利用情况、健康状况、延迟护理的原因、对服务的看法和经验以及医疗保健支出。社会经济地位、种族、保险状况和城乡位置与获得护理的机会有关,黑人、穷人、没有保险和农村的受访者面临着最大的障碍。从用户的角度理解获得护理的障碍对于扩大医疗保健覆盖范围非常重要,无论是在南非还是在其他中低收入国家。