Socio-economic status and the utilisation of physicians' services: results from the Canadian National Population Health Survey

This paper assesses the extent to which Canada's universal health care system has eliminated socio-economic barriers in the use of physician services by examining the role of socio-economic status in the differential use of specific, publicly-insured, primary and specialist care services. Data...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2000-07, Vol.51 (1), p.123-133
Hauptverfasser: Dunlop, Sheryl, Coyte, Peter C., McIsaac, Warren
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container_title Social science & medicine (1982)
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creator Dunlop, Sheryl
Coyte, Peter C.
McIsaac, Warren
description This paper assesses the extent to which Canada's universal health care system has eliminated socio-economic barriers in the use of physician services by examining the role of socio-economic status in the differential use of specific, publicly-insured, primary and specialist care services. Data from the 1994 National Population Health Survey, a nationally representative survey, were analysed using multiple logistic regression. In order to control for the association between primary and specialist utilisation, a two-staged least squares method was used for models explaining specialist utilisation. Health need, as measured by perceived health status and number of health problems, was found to be consistently associated with increased physician utilisation, for both primary and specialist visits. Whereas the likelihood of an individual making at least one visit to a primary care physician was found to be independent of income, those with lower incomes were more likely to be frequent users of primary care, that is, make at least six visits to a primary care physician. Even after adjusting for the greater utilisation of primary care services by those in lower socio-economic groups, and, therefore, their higher exposure to the risk of referral, the utilisation of specialist visits was greater for those in higher socio-economic groups. Canadians lacking a regular medical doctor were less likely to receive primary and specialist care, even after adjustments for socio-economic variables such as income and education. Although financial barriers may not directly impede access to health care services in Canada, differential use of physician services with respect to socio-economic status persists. After adjusting for differences in health need, Canadians with lower incomes and fewer years of schooling visit specialists at a lower rate than those with moderate or high incomes and higher levels of education attained despite the existence of universal health care.
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Even after adjusting for the greater utilisation of primary care services by those in lower socio-economic groups, and, therefore, their higher exposure to the risk of referral, the utilisation of specialist visits was greater for those in higher socio-economic groups. Canadians lacking a regular medical doctor were less likely to receive primary and specialist care, even after adjustments for socio-economic variables such as income and education. Although financial barriers may not directly impede access to health care services in Canada, differential use of physician services with respect to socio-economic status persists. 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source MEDLINE; RePEc; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Biological and medical sciences
Canada
Child
Class Differences
Doctors
Factors
Family Practice
Female
Health care
Health Care Services
Health Care Utilization
Health services
Health Services - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Income Inequality
Least-Squares Analysis
Level of education
Logistic Models
Low income
Male
Medical sciences
Medicine
Middle Aged
Miscellaneous
Multivariate Analysis
Patients
Physicians
Prevention and actions
Primary and specialist services
Private Sector
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Public Sector
Referral and Consultation
Services
Socialized Medicine
Socio-economic status
Socio-economic status Utilisation Primary and specialist services Canada
Socioeconomic Factors
Socioeconomic Status
Specialization
Surveys
Universal Health Insurance - statistics & numerical data
Use
Utilisation
title Socio-economic status and the utilisation of physicians' services: results from the Canadian National Population Health Survey
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