An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India

Understanding how well a health system is meeting the needs of the population is critical to achieving the policy aspirations of universal health coverage. This study focuses on assessing the inequity of forgone care for priority maternal and child health services across India. We utilize data from...

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Main Authors: Bryan Patenaude, Krishna D. Rao, David H. Peters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-07-01
Series:Health Systems & Reform
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2021.1894761
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spelling doaj-b98d91494ca64d3f8c91780833c4e0722021-10-04T13:57:04ZengTaylor & Francis GroupHealth Systems & Reform2328-86042328-86202021-07-017210.1080/23288604.2021.18947611894761An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in IndiaBryan Patenaude0Krishna D. Rao1David H. Peters2Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthUnderstanding how well a health system is meeting the needs of the population is critical to achieving the policy aspirations of universal health coverage. This study focuses on assessing the inequity of forgone care for priority maternal and child health services across India. We utilize data from the 4th round of the Indian National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4) to examine inequality of forgone care. Our outcomes include forgone institutional delivery, antenatal care, medical care for a child with fever or cough, and medical care for a child with diarrhea. Wagstaff’s standardized concentration indices (CIs) are computed at the national level, over urban and rural sub-populations, and by state. Regression decomposition is performed to determine the influence of specific drivers on overall inequality. There was significant variation in the national-level prevalence and CIs for forgone antenatal care (17.8%, CI: −0.423), forgone medical care for a child with fever or cough (32.4%, CI: −0.199), forgone medical care for a child with diarrhea (33.8%, CI: −0.172), and forgone institutional delivery (24.5%, CI: −0.436). For all outcomes, forgone care is disproportionately concentrated among the poor, particularly in rural areas. There is also significant heterogeneity in state-level inequalities. Decomposition analyses show that socioeconomic status, maternal education, rural status, and state-level per capita health spending are the leading drivers of observed inequalities in forgone care. Results suggest attending to both the operation and financing of India’s health care system as well as the social determinants that make poor women more likely to forgo maternal health care.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2021.1894761forgone careindiainequitymaternal child healthaccess
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bryan Patenaude
Krishna D. Rao
David H. Peters
spellingShingle Bryan Patenaude
Krishna D. Rao
David H. Peters
An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India
Health Systems & Reform
forgone care
india
inequity
maternal child health
access
author_facet Bryan Patenaude
Krishna D. Rao
David H. Peters
author_sort Bryan Patenaude
title An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India
title_short An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India
title_full An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India
title_fullStr An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India
title_full_unstemmed An Empirical Examination of the Inequality of Forgone Care in India
title_sort empirical examination of the inequality of forgone care in india
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Health Systems & Reform
issn 2328-8604
2328-8620
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Understanding how well a health system is meeting the needs of the population is critical to achieving the policy aspirations of universal health coverage. This study focuses on assessing the inequity of forgone care for priority maternal and child health services across India. We utilize data from the 4th round of the Indian National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4) to examine inequality of forgone care. Our outcomes include forgone institutional delivery, antenatal care, medical care for a child with fever or cough, and medical care for a child with diarrhea. Wagstaff’s standardized concentration indices (CIs) are computed at the national level, over urban and rural sub-populations, and by state. Regression decomposition is performed to determine the influence of specific drivers on overall inequality. There was significant variation in the national-level prevalence and CIs for forgone antenatal care (17.8%, CI: −0.423), forgone medical care for a child with fever or cough (32.4%, CI: −0.199), forgone medical care for a child with diarrhea (33.8%, CI: −0.172), and forgone institutional delivery (24.5%, CI: −0.436). For all outcomes, forgone care is disproportionately concentrated among the poor, particularly in rural areas. There is also significant heterogeneity in state-level inequalities. Decomposition analyses show that socioeconomic status, maternal education, rural status, and state-level per capita health spending are the leading drivers of observed inequalities in forgone care. Results suggest attending to both the operation and financing of India’s health care system as well as the social determinants that make poor women more likely to forgo maternal health care.
topic forgone care
india
inequity
maternal child health
access
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23288604.2021.1894761
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