International Journal for Equity in Health (Mar 2018)

Measurement and analysis of equity in health: a case study conducted in Zhejiang Province, China

  • Xueshan Sun,
  • Hao Zhang,
  • Xiaoqian Hu,
  • Shuyan Gu,
  • Xuemei Zhen,
  • Yuxuan Gu,
  • Minzhuo Huang,
  • Jingming Wei,
  • Hengjin Dong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-018-0746-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Equity is the core of primary care. The issue of equity in health has become urgent, and China has attached increasing attention to it. With rapid economic development and great changes in medical insurance policy, the pattern of equity in health has changed tremendously. The reform of healthcare in Zhejiang Province is at the forefront in China, and studies on Zhejiang Province are of great significance to the entire country. This paper aimed to measure health equity from the perspectives of health needs and health-seeking behavior and to provide suggestions for the next policy formulations, with respect to timeliness. Methods The investigator’s household survey was conducted in August 2016. A sample of 1000 households, which included2807 individuals in Zhejiang, China, was obtained with the multi-stage stratified cluster sampling method. Descriptive analysis and chi-square tests were adopted in the analysis. The value of the concentration index was used to measure the equity. Results This study found that the poor have more urgent health needs and poorer health situations than the rich. Through studies on health-seeking behavior, the utilization of outpatient services was almost equitable, while the utilization of hospitalization showed a pro-rich inequity (i.e., the rich use more services). Individuals with employer-based medical insurance used more outpatient services than those with rural and urban medical insurance. More people in the poorer income groups did not use inpatient services due to financial difficulties. Conclusions Absolute medical prices and medical insurance may explain the equity in the utilization of outpatient services and the inequity in the utilization of hospitalization. In view of the pro-rich inequity of hospitalization, more financial protection should be provided for the poor.

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