2011
DOI: 10.1057/jphp.2011.35
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Inequities in access to health care in South Africa

Abstract: Achieving equitable universal health coverage requires the provision of accessible, necessary services for the entire population without imposing an unaffordable burden on individuals or households. In South Africa, little is known about access barriers to health care for the general population. We explore affordability, availability, and acceptability of services through a nationally representative household survey (n = 4668), covering utilization, health status, reasons for delaying care, perceptions and exp… Show more

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Cited by 397 publications
(317 citation statements)
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“…Access to and completeness of patient records remains difficult in the overfull South African hospitals equipped with little or no electronic documentation systems [29,30]. Moreover, as noted by Wijers et al, detailed definitive diagnosis according to the Krickenbeck criteria are often not denoted, and that together with possible misdiagnoses may account for some of the 'unknown' diagnoses in the South African arm of this study [9,22,28].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Access to and completeness of patient records remains difficult in the overfull South African hospitals equipped with little or no electronic documentation systems [29,30]. Moreover, as noted by Wijers et al, detailed definitive diagnosis according to the Krickenbeck criteria are often not denoted, and that together with possible misdiagnoses may account for some of the 'unknown' diagnoses in the South African arm of this study [9,22,28].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…The relative dearth in resources and abject patient poverty as remnants from the former apartheid government are very real challenges that face the South African health system [29,33]. Patients have poor access to referral centers, having to travel vast distances, leaving other dependents and possibly their jobs for relatively long periods during the course of treatment [33][34][35].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Evidence suggests that income poverty and racial inequality intensified during the transition to democracy (Seekings, 2011). In the post‐apartheid era, residential segregation persists in the urban areas (Christopher, 2001), and differential access to both public and private health services underscores the difficulty of changing social policy (Harris et al, 2011). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%