Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, US.
Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, US.
Glob Heart. 2020 Feb 6;15(1):7. doi: 10.5334/gh.388.
Poverty is a major barrier to healthcare access in low-income countries. The degree of equitable access for noncommunicable disease (NCD) patients is not known in rural Haiti.
We evaluated the poverty distribution among patients receiving care in an NCD clinic in rural Haiti compared with the community and assessed associations of poverty with sex and distance from the health facility.
We performed a cross-sectional study of patients with NCDs attending a public-sector health center in rural Haiti 2013-2016, and compared poverty among patients with poverty among a weighted community sample from the Haiti 2012 Demographic and Health Survey. We adapted the multidimensional poverty index: people deprived ≥44% of indicators are among the poorest billion people worldwide. We assessed hardship financing: borrowing money or selling belongings to pay for healthcare. We examined the association between facility distance and poverty adjusted for age and sex using linear regression.
Of 379 adults, 72% were women and the mean age was 52.5 years. 17.7% had hypertension, 19.3% had diabetes, 3.1% had heart failure, and 33.8% had multiple conditions. Among patients with available data, 197/296 (66.6%) experienced hardship financing. The proportions of people who are among the poorest billion people for women and men were similar (23.3% vs. 20.3%, p > 0.05). Fewer of the clinic patients were among the poorest billion people compared with the community (22.4% vs. 63.1%, p < 0.001). Patients who were most poor were more likely to live closer to the clinic (p = 0.002).
Among patients with NCD conditions in rural Haiti, poverty and hardship financing are highly prevalent. However, clinic patients were less poor compared with the community population. These data suggest barriers to care access particularly affect the poorest. Socioeconomic data must be collected at health facilities and during community-level surveillance studies to monitor equitable healthcare access.
Poverty and hardship financing are highly prevalent among NCD patients in rural Haiti.Patients attending clinic are less poor than expected from the community.People travelling farther to clinic are less poor.Socioeconomic data should be collected to monitor healthcare access equity.
贫困是低收入国家获得医疗保健的主要障碍。在海地农村,无法了解非传染性疾病(NCD)患者公平获得医疗服务的程度。
我们评估了在海地农村的 NCD 诊所接受治疗的患者的贫困分布情况,并与社区进行了比较,同时评估了贫困与性别和与卫生设施的距离之间的关联。
我们对 2013 年至 2016 年在海地农村一家公立医疗机构就诊的 NCD 患者进行了横断面研究,并将患者的贫困情况与 2012 年海地人口与健康调查的加权社区样本进行了比较。我们采用多维贫困指数:被剥夺≥44%指标的人属于全世界最贫困的 10 亿人。我们评估了因病致贫情况:为支付医疗费用而借钱或变卖财产。我们使用线性回归评估了设施距离与按年龄和性别调整后的贫困之间的关联。
379 名成年人中,72%为女性,平均年龄为 52.5 岁。17.7%患有高血压,19.3%患有糖尿病,3.1%患有心力衰竭,33.8%患有多种疾病。在有可用数据的患者中,197/296(66.6%)经历了因病致贫。女性和男性中属于最贫困的 10 亿人口的比例相似(23.3%比 20.3%,p>0.05)。与社区相比,诊所患者中属于最贫困的 10 亿人口的比例较低(22.4%比 63.1%,p<0.001)。最贫困的患者更有可能居住在离诊所较近的地方(p=0.002)。
在海地农村的 NCD 患者中,贫困和因病致贫现象非常普遍。然而,与社区人群相比,诊所患者的贫困程度较低。这些数据表明,获得医疗保健的障碍尤其影响到最贫困的人。必须在医疗机构和社区层面的监测研究中收集社会经济数据,以监测公平获得医疗保健的情况。
在海地农村的 NCD 患者中,贫困和因病致贫现象非常普遍。在诊所就诊的患者比预期的社区人群要贫困。前往诊所路途较远的人相对贫困。应收集社会经济数据以监测医疗保健的公平性。