State–Level Sexism and Gender Disparities in Health Care Access and Quality in the United States

Author:

Rapp Kristen Schorpp1ORCID,Volpe Vanessa V.2,Hale Tabitha L.3,Quartararo Dominique F.1

Affiliation:

1. Roanoke College, Salem, VA, USA

2. North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA

3. George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA

Abstract

In this investigation, we examined the associations between state-level structural sexism—a multidimensional index of gender inequities across economic, political, and cultural domains of the gender system—and health care access and quality among women and men in the United States. We linked administrative data gauging state-level gender gaps in pay, employment, poverty, political representation, and policy protections to individual-level data on health care availability, affordability, and quality from the national Consumer Survey of Health Care Access (2014–2019; N = 24,250). Results show that higher state-level sexism is associated with greater inability to access needed health care and more barriers to affording care for women but not for men. Furthermore, contrary to our hypothesis, women residing in states with higher state-level sexism report better quality of care than women in states with lower levels of sexism. These findings implicate state-level sexism in perpetuating gender disparities in health care.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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