Newbold K B
Department of Geography, University of Illinois, Urbana 61801, USA.
Health Econ. 1997 Mar-Apr;6(2):197-207. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1099-1050(199703)6:2<197::aid-hec260>3.0.co;2-k.
The main objectives of this paper are to compare Aboriginal and Canadian health status and physician use and to identify the factors associated with the use of physician services. Data are drawn from the 1991 Aboriginal Peoples Survey (APS) and the 1991 General Social Survey (GSS), which are weighted random samples of the Aboriginal and total Canadian populations, respectively. The results demonstrate that Aboriginals were much less likely to use physician services, even though Aboriginals rank their health similarly to the total Canadian population. Location becomes an important aspect of both physician use and health status, with Aboriginals residing on-reserve generally having lower levels of self-assessed health and less likely to have seen a physician. While Aboriginals with the poorest health status were more likely to have seen a physician, other factors including education were found to be barriers to use of health care. Aboriginal identity and cultural orientation provided mixed results.
本文的主要目的是比较原住民与加拿大其他人群的健康状况及就医情况,并确定与就医服务使用相关的因素。数据取自1991年原住民调查(APS)和1991年综合社会调查(GSS),分别是原住民和加拿大总人口的加权随机样本。结果表明,尽管原住民对自身健康的评价与加拿大总人口相似,但他们就医的可能性要小得多。居住地成为就医和健康状况的一个重要因素,居住在保留地的原住民自我评估健康水平普遍较低,看医生的可能性也较小。虽然健康状况最差的原住民看医生的可能性更大,但包括教育在内的其他因素被发现是获得医疗保健的障碍。原住民身份和文化取向的影响则喜忧参半。