Abstract

Research on healthcare inequities has centralized whether marginalized racial, gender, or socioeconomic (SES) groups are afforded equitable access to care, yet scant investigations have focused on how race intersects with other social statuses to shape difficulty accessing health services. Contextual specificity has also been under-researched in this field of knowledge. Data from 59,249 respondents 18 years of age and over from the 2013 Brazilian National Health Survey were analyzed using multilevel regressions models. We test 3 hypotheses: racial, gender, and socioeconomically oppressed groupsare each more likely to report difficulty accessing health services (H1); compared to high-SES white men, low-SES Black women report expressively higher frequencies of the outcome (H2); and intersectional healthcare inequities are larger among low-SES Brazilian states (H3). Partially supporting H1 and H2, results suggest that race and SES, but not gender, are each strong predictors of difficulty accessing healthcare, with low-SES Black respondents facing the highest odds of reporting this outcome. Although H3 was not supported, intersectional groups residing in low-SES Brazilian states were more likely to report difficulty accessing healthcare. This study demonstrated that, together with contextual specificity, the intersections of race with other axes of marginalization should be at the forefront of research and policy addressing healthcare inequities.

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