Ability to pay and equity in access to Italian and British National Health Services.
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Domenighetti G
Institute of Public Communication and Education, Institute of Microeconomics and Public Economics, University of Lugano, Via Buffi 13, Lugano, Switzerland. gianfranco.domenighetti@usi.ch
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Vineis P
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De Pietro C
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Tomada A
Published in:
- European journal of public health. - 2010
English
BACKGROUND
Equity in delivery and distribution of health care is an important determinant of health and a cornerstone in the long way to social justice. We performed a comparative analysis of the prevalence of Italian and British residents who have fully paid out-of-pocket for health services which they could have obtained free of charge or at a lower cost from their respective National Health Services.
METHODS
Cross-sectional study based on a standardized questionnaire survey carried out in autumn 2006 among two representative samples (n = 1000) of the general population aged 20-74 years in each of the two countries.
RESULTS
78% (OR 19.9; 95% CI 15.5-25.6) of Italian residents have fully paid out-of-pocket for at least one access to health services in their lives, and 45% (OR 18.1; 95% CI 12.9-25.5) for more than five accesses. Considering only the last 2 years, 61% (OR 16.5; 95% CI 12.6-21.5) of Italians have fully paid out-of-pocket for at least one access. The corresponding pattern for British residents is 20 and 4% for lifelong prevalence, and 10% for the last 2 years.
CONCLUSIONS
Opening the public health facilities to a privileged private access to all hospital physicians based on patient's ability to pay, as Italy does, could be a source of social inequality in access to care and could probably represent a major obstacle to decreasing waiting times for patients in the standard formal 'free of charge' way of access.
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Language
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Open access status
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bronze
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Identifiers
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Persistent URL
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https://sonar.ch/global/documents/189891
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