在减贫之外:儿童支助赠款对南非获得医疗保健和使用避孕药具的影响

Norman Tafirenyika Nhede, Adrino Mazenda, Dymon Gondwe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究考察了儿童抚养补助金(csg)对南非获得医疗保健和使用避孕药具的影响,调查社会援助是否可以在减轻贫困的主要目标之外增加医疗保健的获得。虽然以前的研究强调了csg减少贫困和提高福利的作用,但人们对其对医疗保健和生殖保健获取的影响知之甚少,特别是考虑到南非的医疗保健差距。本研究使用来自2020年国民收入动态研究-冠状病毒快速移动调查(NIDS-CRAM)第一波的数据,在控制社会经济因素的同时,采用中介分析来分析CSG接收对医疗保健和避孕获得的影响。这些发现表明了一种复杂的关系。社企补助金对获得医疗保健和避孕药具有积极但不显著的间接影响,而有显著的消极直接影响,这表明目前的赠款结构可能无法充分解决现有的障碍。研究结果强调了政策变革的必要性,表明虽然社会保障集团作为社会安全网至关重要,但可以通过增加赠款数额和有针对性的干预措施来解决医疗保健成本和结构性障碍,从而提高其在改善医疗保健获取方面的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Beyond poverty alleviation: The impact of child support grants on healthcare access and contraception use in South Africa
This study examines the impact of Child Support Grants (CSGs) on access to medical care and contraception use in South Africa, investigating whether social assistance can enhance healthcare access beyond its primary aim of alleviating poverty. While previous research highlights CSGs' poverty reduction and welfare enhancement effects, little is known about their effects on healthcare and reproductive healthcare access, especially given South Africa's healthcare disparities. Using data from the first wave of the 2020 National Income Dynamics Study—Coronavirus Rapid Mobile Survey (NIDS-CRAM), this study employs mediation analysis to analyse the effects of CSG receipt on healthcare and contraception access while controlling for socio-economic factors. The findings indicate a complex relationship. CSGs have a positive but insignificant indirect effect on healthcare and contraception access and a significant negative direct effect, suggesting that the current grant structure may not adequately address existing barriers. The results highlight the need for policy changes, indicating that while CSGs are vital as a social safety net, their effectiveness in improving healthcare access could be enhanced through increased grant amounts and targeted interventions to address healthcare costs and structural barriers.
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来源期刊
Dialogues in health
Dialogues in health Public Health and Health Policy
CiteScore
0.70
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134 days
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