Abstract

To examine the extent of equity in access to health care, their determinants and reasons of unmet need of a rural population in Malaysia. Exploratory cross-sectional survey administered by trained interviewers among participants of a health screening program. A rural plantation estate in the West Coast of Peninsular Malaysia. One hundred and thirty out of 142 adults above 18years old who attended the program. Percentages of respondents reporting realised access and unmet need to health care, determinants of both access indicators and reasons for unmet need. Realised access associated with need but not predisposing or enabling factors and unmet need not associated with any variables were considered equitable. A total of 88 (67.7%) respondents had visited a doctor (realised access) in the past 6months and 24.8% (n=31) experienced unmet need in the past 12months. Using logistic regression, realised access was associated with presence of chronic disease (OR 6.97, P<0.001), whereas unmet need was associated with low education level (OR 6.50, P<0.05), 'poor' or 'fair' self-assessed health status (OR 6.03, P<0.05) and highest income group (>RM 2000 per month) (OR 51.27, P<0.05). Personal choice (67.7%) was more commonly expressed than barriers (54.8%) as reasons for unmet need. The study found equity in realised access and inequity in unmet need among the rural population, the latter associated with education level, subjective health status and income. Despite not being generalisable, the findings highlight the need for a national level study on equity in access before the country reforms its health system.

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