Harvard School of Public Health, 665 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2012 Oct;87(4):608-15. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.2012.12-0062. Epub 2012 Aug 27.
This paper uses newly collected household survey data from Accra, Ghana, to investigate whether incomes affect acute and chronic health outcomes in settings that can be considered representative for the large and rapidly growing urban centers of sub-Saharan Africa. The Time Use and Health Study in Accra collected information on incomes, current health status, and health care use from 5,484 persons in 1,250 households, each repeatedly sampled on a rolling basis for a period of 13 weeks. Data collection took place during September 2008-March 2010 to capture seasonal variations. The study found that incomes varied widely between households, and that a high fraction of persons lived below the poverty line. Despite this level of income poverty and an overall remarkably high burden of treatable disease, no systematic differences in self-reported and objectively measured health conditions were detected across socioeconomic groups.
本文利用加纳阿克拉市新收集的家庭调查数据,调查在可被视为撒哈拉以南非洲快速发展的大城市代表的环境中,收入是否会影响急性和慢性健康结果。阿克拉时间使用与健康研究从 1250 户家庭的 5484 人中收集了收入、当前健康状况和医疗保健使用信息,每个家庭在滚动基础上重复抽样 13 周。数据收集于 2008 年 9 月至 2010 年 3 月进行,以捕捉季节性变化。研究发现,家庭之间的收入差异很大,很大一部分人生活在贫困线以下。尽管存在这种程度的收入贫困和总体上极高的可治疗疾病负担,但在社会经济群体之间没有发现自我报告和客观测量的健康状况存在系统差异。