AI Article Synopsis

  • Access to health care in China has transformed with the shift to a socialist market economy, affecting disease control programs like schistosomiasis and creating new barriers to effective treatment.
  • Research conducted in Hunan Province revealed that while infrastructure for disease control exists, many patients lived in areas with limited access to information and specialized services, often without health insurance, leading to high medical costs.
  • The study emphasizes the importance of improving health awareness, enhancing surveillance, and addressing financial barriers to achieve schistosomiasis elimination in China, highlighting the need for further research on access issues.

Article Abstract

Background: Access to health care is a major requirement in improving health and fostering socioeconomic development. In the People's Republic of China (P.R. China), considerable changes have occurred in the social, economic, and health systems with a shift from a centrally planned to a socialist market economy. This brought about great benefits and new challenges, particularly for vertical disease control programs, including schistosomiasis. We explored systemic barriers in access to equitable and effective control of schistosomiasis.

Methodology: Between August 2002 and February 2003, 66 interviews with staff from anti-schistosomiasis control stations and six focus group discussions with health personnel were conducted in the Dongting Lake area, Hunan Province. Additionally, 79 patients with advanced schistosomiasis japonica were interviewed. The health access livelihood framework was utilized to examine availability, accessibility, affordability, adequacy, and acceptability of schistosomiasis-related health care.

Principal Findings: We found sufficient availability of infrastructure and human resources at most control stations. Many patients with advanced schistosomiasis resided in non-endemic or moderately endemic areas, however, with poor accessibility to disease-specific knowledge and specialized health services. Moreover, none of the patients interviewed had any form of health insurance, resulting in high out-of-pocket expenditure or unaffordable care. Reports on the adequacy and acceptability of care were mixed.

Conclusions/significance: There is a need to strengthen health awareness and schistosomiasis surveillance in post-transmission control settings, as well as to reduce diagnostic and treatment costs. Further studies are needed to gain a multi-layered, in-depth understanding of remaining barriers, so that the ultimate goal of schistosomiasis elimination in P.R. China can be reached.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3731233PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0002350DOI Listing

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