Comparison of access to health services among urban-to-urban and rural-to-urban older migrants, and urban and rural older permanent residents in Zhejiang Province, China: a cross-sectional survey

Aug 8, 2018BMC geriatrics

Differences in Health Service Access Among Older Migrants and Long-Term Residents in Urban and Rural Areas of Zhejiang, China

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Abstract

Two-week hospital visiting rates were significantly lower in migrants (55.56% rural-to-urban, 62.50% urban-to-urban) compared to urban (67.40%) and rural (82.25%) .

  • Older adults diagnosed with a need for hospital treatment largely accepted this treatment, showing no significant differences among the four groups.
  • 30.05% of older adults did not visit a doctor for ailments in the two weeks prior to the survey.
  • 16.42% of older adults did not receive hospital treatment after being diagnosed with a need for it.
  • Demographic factors such as age, marital status, educational attainment, major financial source, and living arrangements did not significantly impact the use of health services.

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Key numbers

55.56%
Hospital Visiting Rate ()
Two-week hospital visiting rate among rural-to-urban older migrants
82.25%
Hospital Visiting Rate (Urban )
Two-week hospital visiting rate among urban
30.05%
Did Not Visit a Doctor (Overall)
Percentage of older adults who did not visit a doctor when ill

Full Text

What this is

  • This research examines access to health services among four groups of older adults in Zhejiang Province, China: , , and urban and rural .
  • A cross-sectional survey was conducted with community-dwelling older adults aged 60 and above to assess their health service utilization.
  • The study aims to inform health policy development by identifying disparities in health service access among these groups.

Essence

  • Older migrants have lower hospital visiting rates compared to . Specifically, visit hospitals at a rate of 55.56%, while urban visit at a rate of 82.25%.

Key takeaways

  • Hospital visiting rates are lower among older migrants. The two-week hospital visiting rates were 55.56% for and 62.50% for , compared to 67.40% for urban and 82.25% for rural .
  • Barriers to health service use vary by group. Among those with ailments, 30.05% did not visit a doctor, with citing lack of time and citing unfamiliarity with the area as main reasons.
  • Despite lower hospital visiting rates, older migrants who received a diagnosis indicating need for hospital treatment accepted treatment at rates similar to , suggesting that willingness to seek care may not be the issue.

Caveats

  • The study lacks a strict control group, which may affect the comparability of health outcomes among different migrant groups. Variations in baseline health due to economic development gaps could influence results.
  • The cross-sectional design limits the ability to draw causal conclusions about health service utilization and the future vulnerability of older migrants.
  • Data on the intensity of disease were not collected, which weakens assertions about variations in health service utilization based on the magnitude of need.

Definitions

  • urban-to-urban migrants: Older adults aged 60 years and above who moved from one city to another and reside in Hangzhou without a registered permanent residence.
  • rural-to-urban migrants: Older adults aged 60 years and above who moved from a rural area to Hangzhou and do not have a registered permanent residence.
  • permanent residents: Older adults aged 60 years and above who have a registered permanent residence in Hangzhou.

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