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Int J Equity Health. 2018 Apr 24;17(1):50. doi: 10.1186/s12939-018-0763-7.
A key component of universal health coverage is the ability to access quality healthcare without financial hardship. Poorer individuals are less likely to receive care than wealthier individuals, leading to important differences in health outcomes, and a needed focus on equity. To improve access to healthcare while minimizing financial hardships or inequitable service delivery we need to understand where individuals of different wealth seek care. To ensure progress toward SDG 3, we need to specifically understand where individuals seek reproductive, maternal, and child health services.
We analyzed Demographic and Health Survey data from Bangladesh, Cambodia, DRC, Dominican Republic, Ghana, Haiti, Kenya, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal and Zambia. We conducted weighted descriptive analyses on current users of modern FP and the youngest household child under age 5 to understand and compare country-specific care seeking patterns in use of public or private facilities based on urban/rural residence and wealth quintile.
Modern contraceptive prevalence rate ranged from 8.1% to 52.6% across countries, generally rising with increasing wealth within countries. For relatively wealthy women in all countries except Ghana, Liberia, Mali, Senegal and Zambia, the private sector was the dominant source. Source of FP and type of method sought across facilities types differed widely across countries. Across all countries women were more likely to use the public sector for permanent and long-acting reversible contraceptive methods. Wealthier women demonstrated greater use of the private sector for FP services than poorer women. Overall prevalence rates for diarrhea and fever/ARI were similar, and generally not associated with wealth. The majority of sick children in Haiti did not seek treatment for either diarrhea or fever/ARI, while over 40% of children with cough or fever did not seek treatment in DRC, Haiti, Mali, and Senegal. Of all children who sought care for diarrhea, more than half visited the public sector and just over 30% visited the private sector; differences are more pronounced in the lower wealth quintiles.
Use of the private sector varies widely by reason for visit, country and wealth status. Given these differences, country-specific examination of the role of the private sector furthers our understanding of its utility in expanding access to services across wealth quintiles and providing equitable care.
全民健康覆盖的一个关键组成部分是能够在没有经济困难的情况下获得高质量的医疗保健。与富人相比,穷人获得医疗保健的可能性较低,导致健康结果存在重要差异,需要关注公平问题。为了在减轻经济困难或不平等服务提供的同时改善医疗保健的可及性,我们需要了解不同财富水平的个人在哪里寻求医疗服务。为了确保朝着可持续发展目标 3 取得进展,我们需要特别了解个人在哪里寻求生殖、孕产妇和儿童健康服务。
我们分析了孟加拉国、柬埔寨、刚果民主共和国、多米尼加共和国、加纳、海地、肯尼亚、利比里亚、马里、尼日利亚、塞内加尔和赞比亚的人口与健康调查数据。我们对当前使用现代计划生育方法的人和 5 岁以下的最年轻家庭儿童进行了加权描述性分析,以了解和比较各国根据城乡居住和财富五分位数,在使用公共或私人设施方面的特定国家特定的护理寻求模式。
现代避孕方法的普及率在各国之间从 8.1%到 52.6%不等,总体上随着各国内部财富的增加而上升。除了加纳、利比里亚、马里、塞内加尔和赞比亚之外,所有国家中相对富裕的妇女都倾向于使用私营部门作为主要来源。在所有设施类型中,跨越国家的计划生育服务和所寻求的方法类型都有很大差异。在所有国家,妇女更有可能使用公共部门来获得永久性和长效可逆避孕方法。与较贫穷的妇女相比,较富裕的妇女更倾向于使用私营部门来获得计划生育服务。腹泻和发热/急性呼吸道感染的总体流行率相似,通常与财富无关。海地的大多数患病儿童都没有因腹泻或发热/急性呼吸道感染而寻求治疗,而在刚果民主共和国、海地、马里和塞内加尔,超过 40%的咳嗽或发热儿童没有寻求治疗。所有因腹泻而寻求治疗的儿童中,超过一半人去了公共部门,只有略多于 30%的人去了私营部门;在较低的财富五分位数中,差异更为明显。
私营部门的使用因就诊原因、国家和财富状况而异。鉴于这些差异,对私营部门作用的具体国家审查有助于我们了解其在扩大服务可及性和提供公平服务方面在所有财富五分位数中的效用。