Access to healthcare for deaf people: a model from a middle-income country in Latin America

Fuentes-Lopez, Eduardo; Fuente, Adrian

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine if there are existing healthcare access inequities among the deaf Chilean population when compared to the general Chilean population. METHODS: Data were obtained from a population-based national survey in Chile. In total, 745 prelingually deaf individuals were identified. The number of times the person used the healthcare system was dichotomized and analyzed using a multivariate logistic regression model. RESULTS: Prelingually deaf people had lower incomes, fewer years of education, and greater rates of unemployment and poverty when compared with the general population. Moreover, they visited more general practitioners, mental health specialists, and other medical specialists. On average, they attended more appointments for depression but had fewer general checkups and gynecological appointments than the general population. CONCLUSIONS: Deaf people in Chile have a lower socioeconomic status than the rest of the Chilean population. The results from this study are similar to the findings reported for high-income countries, despite differences in the magnitude of the associations between being deaf and healthcare access. Further studies should be conducted to determine the health status of deaf people in Chile and other Latin American countries and what factors are associated with a significantly lower prevalence of gynecological appointments among deaf women when compared with non-deaf women.

Más información

Título según WOS: Access to healthcare for deaf people: a model from a middle-income country in Latin America
Título según SCOPUS: Access to healthcare for deaf people: a model from a middle-income country in Latin America
Título de la Revista: REVISTA DE SAUDE PUBLICA
Volumen: 54
Editorial: REVISTA DE SAUDE PUBLICA
Fecha de publicación: 2020
Página de inicio: 13
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.11606/s1518-8787.2020054001864

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS