TY - JOUR
T1 - Hospital admissions by socio-economic status does the 'inverse care law' apply to older australians?
AU - Walker, Agnes
AU - Pearce, Jim
AU - Thurecht, Linc
AU - Harding, Ann
PY - 2006/10
Y1 - 2006/10
N2 - Objective: To investigate whether the 'inverse care law' applies to New South Wales (NSW) hospital admissions - especially to older people with high socio-economic status (SES). Design: Cross-sectional study analysing inequalities in public and private hospital admission rates by SES, defined in terms of age, sex and family income/size at the small geographic area level. Setting: Admissions to NSW public and private hospitals in 1999-2000 (1.8 million admissions against a NSW population of 6.4 million). Methodology: Inequalities in hospitalisation rates were expressed as rate ratios across the most and least disadvantaged 20% of the NSW population. Results: Public hospital admission rates for people aged 0-60 years were 24-35% higher for the most disadvantaged 20% of the NSW population than for the least disadvantaged 20%. For 70+ year-olds the direction of this difference was reversed - being 14% lower for the most disadvantaged 20% of the population (5% higher for public patients). For private hospitals this reversal prevailed for all age groups (23-49% lower). For all hospitals it was 16% and 27% lower for 60-69 and 70+ year-olds respectively, with higher admission rates for top SES 60+ year-olds most pronounced for renal dialysis, chemotherapy, colonoscopies and other diagnostic scopes, rehabilitation and follow-up, and cataract operations. Conclusion: While the 'inverse care law' did apply to 60+ year-olds, it did not apply either to younger NSW hospital users or to public patients in public hospitals. Implications: Awareness of these SES-level differentials should result in greater equality of access to hospital services, especially by older people.
AB - Objective: To investigate whether the 'inverse care law' applies to New South Wales (NSW) hospital admissions - especially to older people with high socio-economic status (SES). Design: Cross-sectional study analysing inequalities in public and private hospital admission rates by SES, defined in terms of age, sex and family income/size at the small geographic area level. Setting: Admissions to NSW public and private hospitals in 1999-2000 (1.8 million admissions against a NSW population of 6.4 million). Methodology: Inequalities in hospitalisation rates were expressed as rate ratios across the most and least disadvantaged 20% of the NSW population. Results: Public hospital admission rates for people aged 0-60 years were 24-35% higher for the most disadvantaged 20% of the NSW population than for the least disadvantaged 20%. For 70+ year-olds the direction of this difference was reversed - being 14% lower for the most disadvantaged 20% of the population (5% higher for public patients). For private hospitals this reversal prevailed for all age groups (23-49% lower). For all hospitals it was 16% and 27% lower for 60-69 and 70+ year-olds respectively, with higher admission rates for top SES 60+ year-olds most pronounced for renal dialysis, chemotherapy, colonoscopies and other diagnostic scopes, rehabilitation and follow-up, and cataract operations. Conclusion: While the 'inverse care law' did apply to 60+ year-olds, it did not apply either to younger NSW hospital users or to public patients in public hospitals. Implications: Awareness of these SES-level differentials should result in greater equality of access to hospital services, especially by older people.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33750322315&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/j.1467-842X.2006.tb00466.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1467-842X.2006.tb00466.x
M3 - Article
SN - 1326-0200
VL - 30
SP - 467
EP - 473
JO - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
JF - Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
IS - 5
ER -