Sociodemographic and socioeconomic determinants of health services utilization in Greece: the Hellas Health I study

Author:

Tountas Yannis1,Oikonomou Nikolaos12,Pallikarona Georgia1,Dimitrakaki Christine1,Tzavara Chara1,Souliotis Kyriakos1,Mariolis Anargiros2,Pappa Evelina3,Kontodimopoulos Nick3,Niakas Dimitris3

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Health Services Research, Medical School University of Athens

2. Department of General Practice and Family Medicine, Health Centre of Vyronas, Vyronas, Athens

3. Hellenic Open University, Faculty of Social Sciences, Patra, Greece

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to estimate the demographic and socioeconomic determinants of utilization of the Greek primary and hospital health care services. Data were obtained from the cross-sectional nationwide household survey Hellas Health I (2006). The sample ( N = 1005) was representative of the Greek adult population in terms of age and residency, and was selected by means of a three-stage, proportional-to-size sampling design. The presence of a family doctor was reported in a higher degree by participants of higher social classes and private insurance. After adjusting for self-perceived general health and chronic illness, contacts with health care professionals during the past four weeks were found less for residents of rural areas, while contacts with health care professionals during the past 12 months were found less for men than women, for individuals without private insurance and for individuals of lower education. More out-of-pocket payments were reported by the 34–44 age group, rural area residents and individuals with private insurance. Higher use of private health care services was reported by participants of higher social classes and residents of rural areas and private insurance. Only hospital admissions were not directly influenced by demographic and socioeconomic factors. The findings imply the existence of inequities in access and use of primary health services with clear implications to related policies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

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