Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine factors that influence the unmet healthcare needs of older women in Korea and to examine differences in the reasons for these unmet healthcare needs according to age and residential area. We analyzed data from the 2018 Korea Community Health Survey and enrolled 42,698 older Korean women in this study. Residential area, living arrangement, income, education, basic livelihood subsidy, activity of daily living, subjective health status, hypertension and diabetes, unmet healthcare needs, and the reasons healthcare needs were not met were assessed. Logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors that influenced unmet healthcare needs. Chi-square tests were used to identify reasons for unmet healthcare needs according to age group and residential area. Of the participants, 4151 (9.7%) reported unmet healthcare needs over the past year. The primary reason participants could not use health services was “inconvenient transportation” (38.4%), followed by “financial burden” (28.4%) and “symptoms not severe” (16.8%). There were significant differences in “financial burden”, “difficulty making appointments”, “inconvenient transportation”, and “symptoms not severe” according to both age group and residential area. Factors that influenced unmet healthcare needs were residential area, living alone, lower family income, lower educational level, basic livelihood subsidy, difficult activities of daily living, hypertension and diabetes, and poor subjective health. Older women in Korea living alone in urban and rural areas had more unmet healthcare needs of than those who lived with other people. To address the unmet healthcare needs of older Korean women, transportation and medical facilities need to be improved or established.

Highlights

  • The population aged 65 or older accounted for 14.9% of the total population of Korea in 2019, and this population is expected to increase to 33.9% in 2040 [1]

  • Whether or not there was a Unmet healthcare needs (UHNs) differed significantly according to age, residential area, living arrangement, family income, education, basic livelihood subsidy, activities of daily living, and subjective health

  • There were no significant differences in UHNs according to the diagnoses of hypertension and diabetes (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The population aged 65 or older accounted for 14.9% of the total population of Korea in 2019, and this population is expected to increase to 33.9% in 2040 [1]. Older women in Korea find it more difficult to maintain activities of daily living than older men [8,9] These health and socio-economic deficits of older women may prevent them from maintaining optimal health levels and accessing necessary medical services. These deficits may shorten the healthy lifespan of older Korean women and increase disease prevalence and mortality [10]. These health disparities need to be resolved

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