Boccolini Cristiano Siqueira, de Souza Junior Paulo Roberto Borges
Institute of Scientific and Technological Communication and Information in Health, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Av. Brasil, 4.365 - Pavilhão Haity Moussatché - Manguinhos, Rio de Janeiro, CEP: 21040-900, Brazil.
Int J Equity Health. 2016 Nov 17;15(1):150. doi: 10.1186/s12939-016-0444-3.
The Brazilian Unified Health System is a public healthcare system that has universal and equitable access among its main principles, but the continental size of the country and the complexity of the public health system complicate the task of providing equal access to all. We aim to investigate the factors associated with inequities in healthcare utilization in Brazil.
We employed data from a nationally representative cross-sectional study (2013 National Health Survey; n = 60,202). The outcome was underutilization of healthcare by adults, defined as lack of utilization of one or more of these services: physician or dentist consultation, and blood glucose or blood pressure screening. A logistic regression model, considering the complex sample, was employed (alpha = 5 %).
0.7 % of the sample never visited a physician, 3.3 % never visited a dentist, 3 % never underwent blood pressure screening, 11.5 % never underwent blood glucose screening, and 15 % never utilized at least one of these services. Multivariate models showed a higher likelihood of underutilization of healthcare among individuals of the lowest social class "E" (AOR = 6.31, 95 % CI = 3.76-10.61), younger adults (Adjusted Odds Ratio, or AOR = 4.40, 95 % CI = 3.78-5.12), those with no formal education or incomplete primary education (AOR = 2.93, 95 % CI = 2.30-3.74), males (AOR = 2.16, 95 % CI = 1.99-2.35), and those without private health insurance (AOR = 2.11, 95 % CI = 1.83-2.44). Individuals self-classified as "white" were less likely to report underutilization (AOR = 0.82, 95 % CI = 0.75-0.90).
Despite recent expansion of primary healthcare and oral health programs in Brazil, we observed gaps in healthcare utilization among the most vulnerable segments of the population.
巴西统一卫生系统是一个公共医疗体系,其主要原则包括全民可及且公平,但该国幅员辽阔,公共卫生系统复杂,这使得为所有人提供平等医疗服务的任务变得复杂。我们旨在调查巴西医疗服务利用不平等的相关因素。
我们使用了一项具有全国代表性的横断面研究(2013年全国健康调查;n = 60,202)的数据。研究结果是成年人医疗服务利用不足,定义为未使用以下一项或多项服务:看医生或牙医、血糖或血压筛查。采用了考虑复杂样本的逻辑回归模型(α = 5%)。
0.7%的样本从未看过医生,3.3%从未看过牙医,3%从未进行过血压筛查,11.5%从未进行过血糖筛查,15%从未使用过这些服务中的至少一项。多变量模型显示,社会阶层最低的“E”类人群(优势比[AOR]=6.31,95%置信区间[CI]=3.76 - 10.61)、年轻成年人(调整后优势比[AOR]=4.40,95% CI=3.78 - 5.12)、未接受正规教育或小学教育未完成的人群(AOR=2.93,95% CI=2.30 - 3.74)、男性(AOR=2.16,95% CI=1.99 - 2.35)以及没有私人医疗保险的人群(AOR=2.11,95% CI=1.83 - 2.44)医疗服务利用不足的可能性更高。自我归类为“白人”的个体报告医疗服务利用不足的可能性较低(AOR=0.82,95% CI=0.75 - 0.90)。
尽管巴西近期扩大了初级医疗保健和口腔健康项目,但我们观察到在最脆弱人群中医疗服务利用存在差距。