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The Effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the Social Inequalities of Health Care Use in Hungary: A Nationally Representative Cross-Sectional Study
[journal article]
Abstract
Background: The social representation of restricted health care use during the COVID-19 pandemic has not been evaluated properly yet in Hungary. Objective: Our study aimed to quantify the effect of COVID-19 pandemic measures on general practitioner (GP) visits, specialist care, hospitalization, and ... view more
Background: The social representation of restricted health care use during the COVID-19 pandemic has not been evaluated properly yet in Hungary. Objective: Our study aimed to quantify the effect of COVID-19 pandemic measures on general practitioner (GP) visits, specialist care, hospitalization, and cost-related prescription nonredemption (CRPNR) among adults, and to identify the social strata susceptible to the pandemic effect. Methods: This cross-sectional study was based on nationally representative data of 6611 (Nprepandemic = 5603 and Npandemic = 1008) adults. Multivariable logistic regression models were applied to determine the sociodemographic and clinical factors influencing health care use by odds ratios (ORs) along with the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI). To identify the social strata susceptible to the pandemic effect, the interaction of the time of data collection with the level of education, marital status, and Roma ethnicity, was tested and described by iORs. Results: While the CRPNR did not change, the frequency of GP visits, specialist care, and hospitalization rates was remarkably reduced by 22.2%, 26.4%, and 6.7%, respectively, during the pandemic. Roma proved to be not specifically affected by the pandemic in any studied aspect, and the pandemic restructuring of health care impacted the social subgroups evenly with respect to hospital care. However, the pandemic effect was weaker among primary educated adults (iORGP visits, high-school vs. primary-education = 0.434; 95% CI 0.243-0.776, ORspecialist visit, high-school vs. primary-education = 0.598; 95% CI 0.364-0.985), and stronger among married adults (iORGP visit, widowed vs. married = 2.284; 95% CI 1.043-4.998, iORspecialist visit, widowed vs. married = 1.915; 95% CI 1.157-3.168), on the frequency of GP visits and specialist visits. The prepandemic CRPNR inequality by the level of education was increased (iORhigh-school vs. primary-education = 0.236; 95% CI 0.075–0.743). Conclusion: Primary educated and widowed adults did not follow the general trend, and their prepandemic health care use was not reduced during the pandemic. This shows that although the management of pandemic health care use restrictions was implemented by not increasing social inequity, the drug availability for primary educated individuals could require more support.... view less
Keywords
ISSP; epidemic; contagious disease; Hungary; hospital; family physician; interaction; gipsy; medical specialist; health care; recourse; social stratum; social inequality
Classification
General Sociology, Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Sociology, Sociological Theories
Health Policy
Free Keywords
Corona; Covid-19; Corona-Virus; CRPNR; hospital admission; GP visit; ; interaction effect; Roma; specialist care; ISSP 2021
Document language
English
Publication Year
2022
Page/Pages
p. 1-16
Journal
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19 (2022) 4
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19042258
ISSN
1660-4601
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed