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Local Income Inequality, Individual Socioeconomic Status, and Unmet Healthcare Needs in Ohio, USA
Author(s) -
Dmitry Tumin,
Michelle Menegay,
Emily A. Shrider,
Michael Nau,
Rachel Tumin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
health equity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.826
H-Index - 9
ISSN - 2473-1242
DOI - 10.1089/heq.2017.0058
Subject(s) - health care , inequality , socioeconomic status , medicaid , quartile , logistic regression , medicine , population , gini coefficient , confidence interval , odds ratio , american community survey , household income , economic inequality , demography , gerontology , environmental health , geography , economics , economic growth , sociology , mathematical analysis , mathematics , archaeology , pathology , census
Purpose: Income inequality has been implicated as a potential risk to population health due to lower provision of healthcare services in deeply unequal countries or communities. We tested whether county economic inequality was associated with individual self-report of unmet healthcare needs using a state health survey data set. Methods: Adults residents of Ohio responding to the 2015 Ohio Medicaid Assessment Survey were included in the analysis. Ohio's 88 counties were classified into quartiles according to the Gini coefficient of income inequality. The primary outcome was a composite of self-reported unmet dental care, vision care, mental healthcare, prescription medication, or other healthcare needs within the past year. Unmet healthcare needs were compared according to county inequality quartile using weighted logistic regression. Results: The analytic sample included 37,140 adults. The weighted proportion of adults with unmet healthcare needs was 28%. In multivariable logistic regression, residents of counties in the highest (odds ratio [OR]=1.13, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.01-1.26; p =0.030) and second-highest (OR=1.16, 95% CI: 1.04-1.30; p =0.010) quartiles of income inequality experienced more unmet healthcare needs than residents of the most equal counties. Conclusion: Higher county-level income inequality was associated with individual unmet healthcare needs in a large state survey. This finding represents novel evidence for an individual-level association that may explain aggregate-level associations between community economic inequality and population health outcomes.

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