Health equity has become a progressively popular research topic in recent years. Therefore, this study was made to identify the contributions made by socioeconomic determinants in order to quantify their… Click to show full abstract
Health equity has become a progressively popular research topic in recent years. Therefore, this study was made to identify the contributions made by socioeconomic determinants in order to quantify their roles to healthcare utilization inequity and to show their status especially after the recent reform in Iran, i.e. Health Transformation Plan, which one of its main goals is providing access to healthcare for all people. This study is a cross-sectional study conducted on a national level in Iran in 2015. For the sampling frame, three-stage cluster sampling was used. A total of 22 470 households from the whole country were surveyed by questionnaires through face-to-face interviews. A total of 78 378 subjects responded to the survey, 18 984 subjects (24.2%) reported the need to outpatient healthcare services in the 2 weeks preceding the interview and 12 944 (68.2%) of them had utilized the outpatient services. In addition, 5928 participants (7.6% of total population) reported the need to inpatient healthcare in the 15-month interval prior to the interview. Of these, 5405 subjects (91.2%) had received the inpatient cares. Several factors such as age group, education, marital status and status of household economy play significant roles in seeking inpatient cares. In addition, age group and household economic status have significant impacts on the utilization of outpatient services. While there are several variables that have different effects in determining the need for both outpatient and inpatient services, most of them are not any more significant than what are on the receiving end of these services.
               
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