Critical Analysis of Unmet Healthcare Needs Index for Addressing Regional Healthcare Inequality
10.4332/KJHPA.2020.30.1.37
- Author:
Yukyung PARK
1
;
Jin-Hwan KIM
;
Sun KIM
;
Chang-yup KIM
;
Joo-sung HAN
;
Saerom KIM
Author Information
1. Institute of Health and Environment, Graduate School of Public Health, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
- Publication Type:ORIGINAL ARTICLE
- From:Health Policy and Management
2020;30(1):37-49
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:0
-
Abstract:
Background:Unmet healthcare needs have many advantages for measuring inequalities in healthcare use. However, the existing indicator is difficult to capture the reality of unmet healthcare needs sufficiently and is not quite appropriate in comparing regional inequality. The purpose of this study is to critically analyze the utilization of the unmet healthcare need indicator for regional healthcare inequalities research.
Methods:We used the level of healthcare accessibility and healthcare need to categorize the regions that are known to cause differences in healthcare utilization between regions and verified how existing unmet healthcare need indicator is distributed at the regional level.
Results:Four types of regions were classified according to the high and low levels of healthcare needs and accessibility. The hypothesis about the regional type expected to have the highest unmet healthcare need was not proved. The hypothesis about the lowest expected regional type was proved, but the difference in the average rate of unmet healthcare needs among regional types was not significant. The standard deviation of the rate of unmet healthcare needs among regions within the same type was also higher than the overall regional variation, which also disproved the whole frame of hypothesis.
Conclusion:Failure to prove the hypothesis means the gap between the supposed meaning of the indicator and the reality. In order to understand the current state of healthcare utilization of people in various regions of Korea and to resolve inequality, fundamental research on the in-depth structure and mechanisms of healthcare utilization is needed.