Public Health Services Utilization and Its Determinants among Internal Migrants in China: Evidence from a Nationally Representative Survey

Sep 2, 2017International journal of environmental research and public health

Use of Public Health Services and Factors Influencing It Among Internal Migrants in China

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Abstract

Internal migrants in more developed eastern regions of China used less public health services.

  • Higher socioeconomic status is associated with increased utilization of public health services among internal migrants.
  • Longer duration of residency in the city is positively linked to the use of public health services.
  • Migration across provinces significantly reduces the likelihood of using health records, health education, and online health education.
  • Government subsidies may have contributed to improvements in public health services coverage for internal migrants.
  • Targeted interventions are needed for internal migrants with lower socioeconomic status and those migrating across provinces.

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Key numbers

29.10%
Increase in Health Records Establishment
Up from 22.98% in 2014.
1.37
Higher Odds of Health Records Establishment
Compared to those with primary education or below.
0.88
Lower Probability of Health Records with Provincial Migration
Compared to those migrating within a city.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the utilization of public health services by internal migrants in China.
  • It examines how socioeconomic, migration, and demographic factors influence access to these services.
  • Data were collected from a nationally representative survey conducted in 2014 and 2015.

Essence

  • Internal migrants in China show significant disparities in public health services utilization based on socioeconomic status and migration characteristics. Those with higher education and urban are more likely to access these services.

Key takeaways

  • Public health services utilization among internal migrants increased from 22.98% in 2014 to 29.10% in 2015 for health records. This growth reflects improvements in service coverage due to government subsidies.
  • Higher education levels and urban status significantly enhance the likelihood of establishing health records and receiving health education. College-educated migrants were 1.37 times more likely to establish health records compared to those with primary education.
  • Migration across provinces negatively impacts public health services utilization, with a 12% lower probability of establishing health records compared to those migrating within a city.

Caveats

  • The study lacks data on health status, which may influence public health services utilization. This limits understanding of the full context of service access.
  • The indicators used—health records and health education—do not encompass the complete range of essential public health services available to migrants.

Definitions

  • Hukou: A household registration system in China that determines access to public services based on location and classification.

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