Abstract

This study investigates the influence of the household registration system on rural–urban disparity in healthcare access (including healthcare quality, blood pressure check, blood test, vision test, dental examination, and breast exam), using data from a large-scale nationwide life history survey that covered 150 counties across 28 provinces and municipalities in China. In contrast to the findings of many previous studies that emphasize the disparity in the residence place as the cause of rural–urban disparity in healthcare access, this study finds that the residence place just has a very limited influence on healthcare access in China, and what really matters is the household registration type. Our empirical results show that people with a non-rural household registration type generally have better healthcare access than those with a rural one. For rural residents, changing the registration type of their household (from rural to non-rural) can improve their healthcare access, whereas changing the residence place or migrating from rural to urban areas have no effect. Therefore, mere rural-to-urban migration may not be a valid measure to eliminate the rural–urban disparity in healthcare access, unless the institution of healthcare resource allocation is reformed.

Highlights

  • Rural–urban disparity in healthcare access is especially reflected in the ease of physician visit, rehabilitative and palliative healthcare services, emergency health service, etc. [1,2,3]

  • In the second set of regressions, this study examined the effects of household registration change and migration on healthcare access for rural residents and revealed which of these factors may play a critical role in improving rural–urban disparity to health access

  • The results show that the household registration type was significantly associated with healthcare access

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Summary

Introduction

Rural–urban disparity in healthcare access is especially reflected in the ease of physician visit, rehabilitative and palliative healthcare services, emergency health service, etc. [1,2,3]. Rural–urban disparity in healthcare access is especially reflected in the ease of physician visit, rehabilitative and palliative healthcare services, emergency health service, etc. Most studies argue that the social economic discrepancy between residence places is the most important reason for rural–urban disparity in healthcare access. A number of studies propose that advancing urbanization or migration from rural to urban areas can improve healthcare access for rural residents to some extent [11,12]. The utilization of healthcare resources in urban areas is still very limited for rural-to-urban migrants in China, and changing the residence place from rural to urban areas seems to have a very limited effect on the improvement of healthcare access [13,14,15]. The deep-rooted reason for rural–urban disparity in healthcare access still needs deep investigation

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