African Population and Health Research Center, Nairobi, Kenya
African Population and Health Research Center, Nairobi, Kenya.
BMJ Open. 2021 May 28;11(5):e041032. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-041032.
To determine the prevalence of unmet need for primary healthcare and associated individual and household-level factors in Kenya.
The data for this study are drawn from the 2016 Kenya Integrated Household Budget Survey (KIHBS). A multistage sampling technique involving a systematic selection of clusters at the national level and final selection of households was used.
This study was conducted in Kenya. The KIHBS is a nationally representative survey on a wide range of indicators to assess the progress made in improving the living standards of the population at the national level.
A total of 9447 households comprising 15 539 household members who reported a sickness or injury over the 4 weeks preceding this survey were included in this study. The study respondents comprised of the household heads.
The primary outcome of this study is unmet need for primary healthcare defined as an unexpressed demand for primary healthcare following a reported sickness or injury over the 4 weeks preceding this survey.
About one in every five study participants experienced an unexpressed demand for primary care. The odds of having unmet need for primary healthcare were 68% higher among participants without health insurance coverage compared with those with health insurance (adjusted OR 1.68; p<0.001; 95% CI 1.34 to 2.09) and 45% higher among households headed by single or unmarried persons compared with the those who were in a marital union (adjusted OR 1.45; p<0.05; 95% CI 1.06 to 1.98).
Our findings show that there is still a considerable unexpressed demand for primary care services despite widespread implementation of Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in Kenya, with households without a health insurance cover bearing the highest burden. Therefore, the design of UHC reforms in Kenya should focus on embedding social health protection to escalate the demand for primary healthcare services.
确定肯尼亚初级医疗保健未满足需求的流行率及其与个人和家庭层面因素的关系。
本研究的数据来自 2016 年肯尼亚综合家庭预算调查(KIHBS)。采用多阶段抽样技术,包括在国家一级进行系统的集群选择和最终的家庭选择。
本研究在肯尼亚进行。KIHBS 是一项全国性的广泛指标调查,旨在评估在提高全国人口生活水平方面取得的进展。
本研究共纳入 9447 户家庭,共 15539 名家庭成员在本次调查前的 4 周内报告患病或受伤。研究对象包括家庭户主。
本研究的主要结果是初级医疗保健未满足需求,定义为在本次调查前的 4 周内报告患病或受伤后,对初级医疗保健的未表达需求。
约每五名研究参与者中就有一人对初级医疗保健存在未表达的需求。与有医疗保险的参与者相比,没有医疗保险的参与者对初级医疗保健的未满足需求的可能性高 68%(调整后的比值比 1.68;p<0.001;95%CI 1.34 至 2.09),与已婚家庭相比,单身或未婚家庭户主的可能性高 45%(调整后的比值比 1.45;p<0.05;95%CI 1.06 至 1.98)。
尽管肯尼亚已经广泛实施了全民健康覆盖(UHC),但我们的研究结果表明,仍有相当大的未表达的初级医疗保健服务需求,没有医疗保险的家庭承受着最大的负担。因此,肯尼亚 UHC 改革的设计应侧重于嵌入社会健康保护,以提升对初级医疗保健服务的需求。