Priya Agarwal-Harding, Brielle Ruscitti, Donald S Shepard, Arturo Harker Roa, Diana M Bowser
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This is the first study to link healthcare-seeking behaviors with costs for Venezuelan migrants in Colombia, encompassing costs of missing work or usual activities due to healthcare events.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We use self-reported survey data from Venezuelan migrants and Colombians living in Colombia (September-November 2020) to compare healthcare-seeking behaviors and cost variables by nationality using two-sampled t-tests or Chi-square tests (X<sup>2</sup>). The International Classification of Diseases was used to compare reported household illnesses for both populations. Average health service direct costs were estimated using the Colombian Government's Suficiencia database and self-reported out-of-pocket (OOP) payments for laboratory and pharmacy services. Indirect costs were calculated by multiplying self-reported days of missed work or usual activities with estimated income levels, derived by matching characteristics using the Gran Enquesta Integrada de Hogares database. We calculate economic burdens for both populations, combining self-reported healthcare-seeking behaviors and estimated healthcare service unit costs across six healthcare-seeking behavior categories.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Despite similar disease profiles, Venezuelan migrants are 21.3% more likely to forego formal care than Colombians, with 746.3% more Venezuelans reporting lack of health insurance as their primary reason. Venezuelan women and uninsured report the greatest difficulties in accessing health services, with accessing medications becoming more difficult for Venezuelan women during the COVID-19 pandemic. Colombians cost the health system more per treated illness event (US$40) than Venezuelans (US$26) in our sample, over a thirty-day period. Venezuelans incur higher costs for emergency department visits (123.5% more) and laboratory/ pharmacy OOP payments (24.7% more).</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>While Colombians and Venezuelans share similar disease burdens, significant differences exist in access, cost, and health-seeking behaviors. Increasing Venezuelan health insurance enrollment and tackling accessibility barriers are crucial for ensuring healthcare equity and effectively integrating the migrant population. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:哥伦比亚接纳了 300 多万委内瑞拉侨民,因其在社会融合方面的进步而备受赞誉,其中包括为移民提供全民医保系统。然而,移民和侨民在获得医疗保健服务方面仍然存在障碍,人们对他们在寻求医疗保健服务的行为和相关费用方面的差异知之甚少。这是第一项将在哥伦比亚的委内瑞拉移民的医疗保健行为与成本联系起来的研究,包括因医疗保健事件而错过工作或日常活动的成本:我们使用居住在哥伦比亚的委内瑞拉移民和哥伦比亚人的自我报告调查数据(2020 年 9 月至 11 月),使用双抽样 t 检验或卡方检验 (X2) 比较不同国籍的医疗保健寻求行为和成本变量。国际疾病分类用于比较两种人群报告的家庭疾病。利用哥伦比亚政府的 Suficiencia 数据库以及化验室和药房服务的自付(OOP)费用估算平均医疗服务直接成本。间接成本的计算方法是,将自报的误工天数或日常活动天数与估计收入水平相乘,估计收入水平是通过使用 Gran Enquesta Integrada de Hogares 数据库匹配特征得出的。我们结合自我报告的就医行为和六个就医行为类别的医疗服务单位成本估算,计算出这两个人群的经济负担:尽管疾病谱相似,但委内瑞拉移民放弃正规医疗服务的可能性比哥伦比亚人高出 21.3%,而委内瑞拉移民表示缺乏医疗保险是其主要原因的人数比哥伦比亚人多出 746.3%。委内瑞拉妇女和无保险者在获得医疗服务方面遇到的困难最大,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,委内瑞拉妇女获得药物变得更加困难。在我们的样本中,哥伦比亚人在 30 天内每次治疗疾病的花费(40 美元)高于委内瑞拉人(26 美元)。委内瑞拉人在急诊室就诊的费用(高出 123.5%)和实验室/药房的自付费用(高出 24.7%)更高:结论:哥伦比亚人和委内瑞拉人的疾病负担相似,但在就医途径、费用和就医行为方面存在显著差异。提高委内瑞拉人的医疗保险参保率和解决就医障碍对于确保医疗公平和有效整合流动人口至关重要。研究结果表明,改善移民获得初级医疗保健的机会将节省哥伦比亚的医疗保健支出。
Disparities in healthcare-seeking behaviors and associated costs between Venezuelan migrants and Colombians residing in Colombia.
Background: Colombia, which hosts over 3 million of the Venezuelan diaspora, is lauded for its progressive approach to social integration, including providing migrants access to its universal health coverage system. However, barriers to healthcare persist for both migrant and host populations, with poorly understood disparities in healthcare-seeking behaviors and associated costs. This is the first study to link healthcare-seeking behaviors with costs for Venezuelan migrants in Colombia, encompassing costs of missing work or usual activities due to healthcare events.
Methods: We use self-reported survey data from Venezuelan migrants and Colombians living in Colombia (September-November 2020) to compare healthcare-seeking behaviors and cost variables by nationality using two-sampled t-tests or Chi-square tests (X2). The International Classification of Diseases was used to compare reported household illnesses for both populations. Average health service direct costs were estimated using the Colombian Government's Suficiencia database and self-reported out-of-pocket (OOP) payments for laboratory and pharmacy services. Indirect costs were calculated by multiplying self-reported days of missed work or usual activities with estimated income levels, derived by matching characteristics using the Gran Enquesta Integrada de Hogares database. We calculate economic burdens for both populations, combining self-reported healthcare-seeking behaviors and estimated healthcare service unit costs across six healthcare-seeking behavior categories.
Results: Despite similar disease profiles, Venezuelan migrants are 21.3% more likely to forego formal care than Colombians, with 746.3% more Venezuelans reporting lack of health insurance as their primary reason. Venezuelan women and uninsured report the greatest difficulties in accessing health services, with accessing medications becoming more difficult for Venezuelan women during the COVID-19 pandemic. Colombians cost the health system more per treated illness event (US$40) than Venezuelans (US$26) in our sample, over a thirty-day period. Venezuelans incur higher costs for emergency department visits (123.5% more) and laboratory/ pharmacy OOP payments (24.7% more).
Conclusions: While Colombians and Venezuelans share similar disease burdens, significant differences exist in access, cost, and health-seeking behaviors. Increasing Venezuelan health insurance enrollment and tackling accessibility barriers are crucial for ensuring healthcare equity and effectively integrating the migrant population. Findings suggest that improving migrant access to primary healthcare would produce savings in Colombian healthcare expenditures.
期刊介绍:
International Journal for Equity in Health is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal presenting evidence relevant to the search for, and attainment of, equity in health across and within countries. International Journal for Equity in Health aims to improve the understanding of issues that influence the health of populations. This includes the discussion of political, policy-related, economic, social and health services-related influences, particularly with regard to systematic differences in distributions of one or more aspects of health in population groups defined demographically, geographically, or socially.