Greene Jessica, Guanais Frederico
Marxe School of Public and International Affairs, Baruch College, City University of New York, New York City, New York, United States of America.
Inter-American Development Bank, Lima, Peru.
Rev Panam Salud Publica. 2018 Nov 9;42:e127. doi: 10.26633/RPSP.2018.127. eCollection 2018.
Most Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) countries are working toward the provision of universal health coverage, and ensuring equity is a priority for those nations. The goal of this study was to examine the extent to which adults' socioeconomic status was related to health care experience in six LAC countries.
This cross-sectional study examined the relationship between educational attainment and seven health experience outcomes in three areas: assessment of the health system, access to care, and experience with general practitioner. For this work, we used data from an Inter-American Development Bank survey of adults in Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Jamaica, Mexico, and Panama that was conducted in 2012-2014.
Brazil and Jamaica, the two countries with unified public coverage, stood out for having substantially greater inequality, according to the results of bivariate analyses, with more-educated respondents reporting better health care experiences for five of the seven outcomes. For Jamaica, educational differences largely remained in multivariate analyses: college graduates were less likely (odds ratio (OR) = 0.37) than those with primary education to report their health system needs major reform and were more likely (OR = 2.57) to have a regular doctor. In Brazil, educational differences were mostly eliminated in multivariate models, though people with private insurance consistently reported better outcomes than those with public coverage. Colombia, in contrast, exhibited the least inequality despite having the highest income inequality of the six countries.
Future research is needed to understand the policies and strategies that have resulted in Colombia achieving high levels of equity in patient health care experience, and Jamaica and Brazil demonstrating high levels of inequality.
大多数拉丁美洲和加勒比地区(LAC)国家都在努力实现全民健康覆盖,确保公平是这些国家的首要任务。本研究的目的是考察六个LAC国家中成年人的社会经济地位与医疗保健体验之间的关联程度。
这项横断面研究考察了教育程度与三个领域的七种健康体验结果之间的关系:卫生系统评估、获得医疗服务的机会以及全科医生诊疗体验。为此,我们使用了美洲开发银行2012 - 2014年对巴西、哥伦比亚、萨尔瓦多、牙买加、墨西哥和巴拿马成年人进行的一项调查数据。
根据双变量分析结果,巴西和牙买加这两个拥有统一公共覆盖体系的国家,不平等程度显著更高,在七种结果中的五种方面,受教育程度较高的受访者报告的医疗保健体验更好。对于牙买加,在多变量分析中教育差异基本依然存在:大学毕业生比小学学历者报告其卫生系统需要重大改革的可能性更低(优势比(OR)= 0.37),且有固定医生的可能性更高(OR = 2.57)。在巴西,多变量模型中教育差异大多消除了,不过拥有私人保险的人始终比拥有公共保险的人报告的结果更好。相比之下,哥伦比亚尽管在六国中收入不平等程度最高,但不平等程度却是最低的。
需要开展进一步研究,以了解促成哥伦比亚在患者医疗保健体验方面实现高度公平,以及牙买加和巴西表现出高度不平等的政策和策略。