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Inpatient care of the elderly in Brazil and India: Assessing social inequalities
Authors:Andrew Amos Channon  Monica Viegas Andrade  Kenya Noronha  Tiziana Leone  T.R. Dilip
Affiliation:1. Centre for Global Health, Population, Poverty and Policy, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK;2. CEDEPLAR, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil;3. London School of Economics, London, UK;4. Public Health Foundation of India, Delhi, India
Abstract:The rapidly growing older adult populations in Brazil and India present major challenges for health systems in these countries, especially with regard to the equitable provision of inpatient care. The objective of this study was to contrast inequalities in both the receipt of inpatient care and the length of time that care was received among adults aged over 60 in two large countries with different modes of health service delivery. Using the Brazilian National Household Survey from 2003 and the Indian National Sample Survey Organisation survey from 2004 inequalities by wealth (measured by income in Brazil and consumption in India) were assessed using concentration curves and indices. Inequalities were also examined through the use of zero-truncated negative binomial models, studying differences in receipt of care and length of stay by region, health insurance, education and reported health status. Results indicated that there was no evidence of inequality in Brazil for both receipt and length of stay by income per capita. However, in India there was a pro-rich bias in the receipt of care, although once care was received there was no difference by consumption per capita for the length of stay. In both countries the higher educated and those with health insurance were more likely to receive care, while the higher educated had longer stays in hospital in Brazil. The health system reforms that have been undertaken in Brazil could be credited as a driver for reducing healthcare inequalities amongst the elderly, while the significant differences by wealth in India shows that reform is still needed to ensure the poor have access to inpatient care. Health reforms that move towards a more public funding model of service delivery in India may reduce inequality in elderly inpatient care in the country.
Keywords:Inpatient   Brazil   India   Inequalities   Health system
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