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Age Groups
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Related Publications
(6)
Primary Care, Self-rated Health, and Reductions in Social Disparities in Health
The Effects Of Specialist Supply On Populations' Health: Assessing The Evidence
COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERS AND RACIAL/ETHNIC DISPARITIES IN HEALTHY LIFE
Inequality in America: The Contribution of Health Centers in Reducing and Eliminating Disparities in Access to Care
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Policy relevant determinants of health: an international perspective
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Policy relevant determinants of health: an international perspective
(
Citations: 107
)
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Barbara Starfield
,
Leiyu Shi
Background: International comparisons can provide clues to understanding some of the important policy-related determinants of health, including those related to the provision of
health care
services. An earlier study indicated that the strength of the
primary care
infrastructure of a
health services
system might be related to overall costs of health services. The purpose of the current research was to determine the robustness of the findings in the light of the passage of 5–10 years, the addition of two more countries, and the findings of other research on the possible importance of other determinants of country health levels. Methods: Thirteen industrialized countries, all with populations of at least 5 million, were characterized by the relative strength of their
primary care
infrastructure, the degree of national income inequality, and a major manifestation of a behavioral determinant of health that is amenable to policy intervention (smoking), using international data sets and national informants.
Health system
and
primary care
practice characteristics were judged according to pre-set criteria. Major indicators of health were used as dependent variables, as were
health care
costs. Findings: The stronger the primary care, the lower the costs. Countries with very weak
primary care
infrastructures have poorer performance on major aspects of health. Although countries that are intermediate in the strength of their
primary care
generally have levels of health at least as good as those with high levels of primary care, this is not the case in early life, when the impact of strong
primary care
is greatest. A subset of characteristics (equitable distribution of resources, publicly accountable universal financial coverage, low cost sharing, comprehensive services, and family-oriented services) distinguishes countries with overall good health from those with poor health at all ages. Neither
income inequality
nor smoking status accurately identified those countries with either consistently high or consistently poor performance on the health indicators. Interpretation: A certain level of
health care
expenditures may be required to achieve overall good health levels, even in the presence of strong
primary care
infrastructures. Very low costs may interfere with achievement of good health, particularly at older ages, although very high levels of costs may signal excessive and potentially health-compromising care. Five policy-relevant characteristics appear to be related to better
population health
levels. There is no consistent relationship between income inequality, smoking, and health levels as measured by various indicators of health in different age groups.
Journal:
Health Policy
, vol. 60, no. 3, pp. 201-218, 2002
DOI:
10.1016/S0168-8510(01)00208-1
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Annual
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Citation Context
(27)
...International comparative research shows that healthcare systems with a strong primary care orientation tend to have lower healthcare costs[
1
]...
Christel E van Dijk
,
et al.
Minor surgery in general practice and effects on referrals to hospital...
...Countries with a strong primary healthcare system can improve their populations’ health outcomes and are better able to avoid excessive health services costs [
2
,3]...
Hilary Bekker
,
et al.
Effective continuing professional development for translating shared d...
...Carlson 2004;
Starfield and Shi 2002
) or on developing countries (e.g...
Sharifah Azizah Haron
,
et al.
Health Divide: Economic and Demographic Factors Associated with Self-R...
...Better international comparative data and analyses of good practices will produce information to policy makers and those responsible for provision of services about the drivers of strong primary care [
10-13
]...
Dionne S Kringos
,
et al.
The european primary care monitor: structure, process and outcome indi...
...may also contribute more to improving population health than specialized health services [10,
11
]...
...Given that a strong PHC system has a positive impact on population health and reduces the social-economic gradient in health [10,
11
,37-39] provincial and national governments in China are determined to rebuild a more equitable PHC system to address widespread dissatisfaction and inability to access care due to the shift to a market-oriented health system...
Sabrina T. Wong
,
et al.
Developing a Performance Measurement Framework and Indicators for Comm...
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