TY - JOUR
T1 - Tracking and Decomposing Health and Disease Inequality in Thailand
AU - Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara
AU - Lim, Lynette L.Y.
AU - Carmichael, Gordon A.
AU - Seubsman, Sam Ang
AU - Sleigh, Adrian C.
PY - 2009/11
Y1 - 2009/11
N2 - Purpose: In middle-income countries, interest in the study of inequalities in health has focused on aggregate types of health outcomes, like rates of mortality. This work moves beyond such measures to focus on disease-specific health outcomes with the use of national health survey data. Methods: Cross-sectional data from the national Health and Welfare Survey 2003, covering 52,030 adult aged 15 or older, were analyzed. The health outcomes were the 20 most commonly reported diseases. The age-sex adjusted concentration index (C*) of ill health was used as a measure of socioeconomic health inequality (values ranging from -1 to +1). A negative (or positive) concentration index shows that a disease was more concentrated among the less well off (or better off). Crude concentration indices (C) for four of the most common diseases were also decomposed to quantify determinants of inequalities. Results: Several diseases, such as malaria (C* = -0.462), goiter (C* = -0.352), kidney stone (C* = -0.261), and tuberculosis (C* = -0.233), were strongly concentrated among those with lower incomes, whereas allergic conditions (C* = 0.174) and migraine (C* = 0.085) were disproportionately reported by the better off. Inequalities were found to be associated with older age, low education, and residence in the rural Northeast and rural North of Thailand. Conclusions: Pro-equity health policy in Thailand and other middle-income countries with health surveys can now be informed by national data combining epidemiological, socioeconomic and health statistics in ways not previously possible.
AB - Purpose: In middle-income countries, interest in the study of inequalities in health has focused on aggregate types of health outcomes, like rates of mortality. This work moves beyond such measures to focus on disease-specific health outcomes with the use of national health survey data. Methods: Cross-sectional data from the national Health and Welfare Survey 2003, covering 52,030 adult aged 15 or older, were analyzed. The health outcomes were the 20 most commonly reported diseases. The age-sex adjusted concentration index (C*) of ill health was used as a measure of socioeconomic health inequality (values ranging from -1 to +1). A negative (or positive) concentration index shows that a disease was more concentrated among the less well off (or better off). Crude concentration indices (C) for four of the most common diseases were also decomposed to quantify determinants of inequalities. Results: Several diseases, such as malaria (C* = -0.462), goiter (C* = -0.352), kidney stone (C* = -0.261), and tuberculosis (C* = -0.233), were strongly concentrated among those with lower incomes, whereas allergic conditions (C* = 0.174) and migraine (C* = 0.085) were disproportionately reported by the better off. Inequalities were found to be associated with older age, low education, and residence in the rural Northeast and rural North of Thailand. Conclusions: Pro-equity health policy in Thailand and other middle-income countries with health surveys can now be informed by national data combining epidemiological, socioeconomic and health statistics in ways not previously possible.
KW - Concentration index
KW - Decomposition
KW - Health inequality
KW - Specific diseases
KW - Thailand
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=70349729965&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.annepidem.2009.04.009
DO - 10.1016/j.annepidem.2009.04.009
M3 - Article
SN - 1047-2797
VL - 19
SP - 800
EP - 807
JO - Annals of Epidemiology
JF - Annals of Epidemiology
IS - 11
ER -