Title of article
Horizontal equity in health care utilization evidence from three high-income Asian economies
Author/Authors
Jui-fen R. Lu، نويسنده , , Gabriel M. Leung، نويسنده , , Soonman Kwon، نويسنده , , Keith Y.K. Tin، نويسنده , , Eddy van Doorslaer، نويسنده , , Owen O’Donnell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
14
From page
199
To page
212
Abstract
This paper compares the extent to which the principle of “equal treatment for equal need”(ETEN) is maintained in the health care delivery systems of Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan. Deviations in the degree to which health care is distributed according to need are measured by an index of horizontal inequity. Income-related inequality in utilization is split into four major sources: (i) direct effect of income; (ii) need indicators (self-assessed health status, activity limitation, and age and gender interaction terms); (iii) non-need variables (education, work status, private health insurance coverage, employer-provided medical benefits, Medicaid status (low-income medical assistance), geographic region and urban/rural residency and (iv) a residual term. Service types studied include western doctor, licensed traditional medicine practitioner (LTMP), dental and emergency room (ER) visits, as well as inpatient admissions. Violations of the ETEN principle are observed for physician and dental services in Hong Kong . There is pro-rich inequity in western doctor visits. Unusually, this inequity exists for general practitioner but not specialist care. In contrast, South Korea appears to have almost comprehensively maintained ETEN although the better-off have preferential access to higher levels of outpatient care. Taiwan shows intermediate results in that the rich are marginally more likely to use outpatient services, but quantities of western doctor and dental visits are evenly distributed while there is modest pro-rich bias in the number of LTMP episodes. ER visits and inpatient admissions in Taiwan are either proportional or slightly pro-poor. Future work should focus on the evaluation of policy interventions aimed at reducing the observed unequal distributions.
Keywords
Income-related inequity , Health care utilization , Hong Kong , Taiwan , SouthKorea , Decomposition analysis , Income-related inequality
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
603194
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