Geographical inequalities in healthcare utilisation and the contribution of compositional factors: A multilevel analysis of 497 districts in Indonesia

Publons ID25163265
Wos IDWOS:000500938700008
Doi10.1016/j.healthplace.2019.102236
TitleGeographical inequalities in healthcare utilisation and the contribution of compositional factors: A multilevel analysis of 497 districts in Indonesia
First AuthorMulyanto, Joko; Kunst, Anton E.; Kringos, Dionne S.;
Last Author
AuthorsMulyanto, J; Kunst, AE; Kringos, DS;
Publish DateNOV 2019
Journal NameHEALTH & PLACE
Citation11
AbstractSubstantial inequalities in healthcare utilisation are reported in Indonesia. To develop appropriate health policies and interventions, we need to better understand geographical patterns in inequalities and any contributing factors. This study investigates geographical inequalities in healthcare utilisation across 497 districts in Indonesia and whether compositional factors - wealth, education, health insurance - contribute to such inequalities. Using data from a nationally representative Basic Health Research survey, from 2013 (N= 694,625), we applied multilevel logistic regressions, adjusted for need, to estimate associations of compositional factors with outpatient and inpatient care utilisation and to assess variability at province and district levels. We observed large variation of healthcare utilisation at district level and smaller variations at province level. Cities had higher utilisation rates than rural districts. Compositional factors contributed only modestly to geographical inequalities in healthcare utilisation. The effect of compositional factors on individual healthcare utilisation was stronger in rural areas as compared to cities and other areas with higher population densities. Unexplained district variation was substantial, comparable to that associated with health insurance. In policies to tackle inequalities in healthcare utilisation, addressing geographical factors such as service availability and infrastructures may be as important as improving compositional factors like health insurance.
Publish TypeJournal
Publish Year2019
Page Begin(not set)
Page End(not set)
Issn1353-8292
Eissn1873-2054
Urlhttps://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000500938700008
Authordr. JOKO MULYANTO, S.Ked, M.Sc., PhD
File17230.pdf