Hong Chris J, Trope Graham E, Buys Yvonne M, Robinson Barbara E, Jin Ya-Ping
Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa.
Department of Ophthalmology and Vision Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto.
Can J Ophthalmol. 2014 Aug;49(4):320-5. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjo.2014.03.006. Epub 2014 Jul 19.
To examine whether government-funded, low-income vision care programs improve use of eye care services by low-income individuals in Canada.
Cross-sectional survey.
27,375 white respondents to the Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) Healthy Aging 2008/2009.
Government-funded, low-income vision care programs were reviewed. The amount of assistance provided was compared with professional fee schedules for general/routine eye examinations and market prices for eyeglasses. The utilization of eye care providers was derived from the CCHS.
To receive low-income vision care assistance, individuals must be in receipt of social assistance. Criteria for receiving social assistance are stringent. The Canadian Financial Capability Survey revealed that 7.9% of Canadians aged 45 to 64 years and 5.5% aged ≥65 years received social assistance in 2009. The CCHS found in 2008/2009 that 12.5% of citizens aged 45 to 64 years and 13.2% of those aged ≥65 years had difficulty paying for basic expenses such as food. In 5 provinces, low-income vision care assistance fully covers a general/routine eye examination. In the remainder, the assistance provided is insufficient for a general/routine eye examination. The assistance for eyeglasses is inadequate in 5 provinces, requiring out-of-pocket copayments. Among middle-aged whites who self-reported not having glaucoma, cataracts, diabetes, or vision problems not corrected by lenses, utilization of eye care providers was 28.1% among those with financial difficulty versus 41.9% among those without (p < 0.05), giving a prevalence ratio 0.68 (95% CI 0.57-0.80) adjusted for age, sex and education.
Despite government assistance, low-income individuals use vision care services less often than wealthy individuals.
研究加拿大政府资助的低收入视力保健项目是否能提高低收入人群对眼部护理服务的利用率。
横断面调查。
27375名参与2008/2009年加拿大社区健康调查(CCHS)“健康老龄化”的白人受访者。
对政府资助的低收入视力保健项目进行审查。将提供的援助金额与普通/常规眼部检查的专业收费标准以及眼镜的市场价格进行比较。眼部护理服务提供者的利用率数据来自CCHS。
要获得低收入视力保健援助,个人必须领取社会救助。领取社会救助的标准很严格。加拿大金融能力调查显示,2009年45至64岁的加拿大人中有7.9%、65岁及以上的加拿大人中有5.5%领取了社会救助。CCHS在2008/2009年发现,45至64岁的公民中有12.5%、65岁及以上的公民中有13.2%在支付食品等基本费用方面有困难。在5个省份,低收入视力保健援助完全覆盖普通/常规眼部检查。在其余省份,提供的援助不足以支付普通/常规眼部检查费用。在5个省份,眼镜援助不足,需要自付共付费用。在自我报告没有青光眼、白内障、糖尿病或未通过镜片矫正的视力问题的中年白人中,有经济困难者对眼部护理服务提供者的利用率为28.1%,无经济困难者为41.9%(p<0.05),经年龄、性别和教育调整后的患病率比为0.68(95%CI 0.57 - 0.80)。
尽管有政府援助,低收入人群使用视力保健服务的频率仍低于富裕人群。