Titre :
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Socioeconomic equity in amenable mortality in Finland 1992-2008. (2012)
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Auteurs :
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Sonja LUMME ;
Ilmo Keskimäki ;
LEYLAND (Alastair-H) : GBR. Mrc Social and Public Health Sciences Unit. Glasgow. ;
Reijo SUND ;
The National Institute for Health and Welfare. Health and Social Services. Service System Department. Helsinki. FIN
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Type de document :
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Article
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Dans :
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Social science and medicine (vol. 75, n° 5, 2012)
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Pagination :
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905-913
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Langues:
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Anglais
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Mots-clés :
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Europe sociale
;
Egalité sociale
;
Facteur socioéconomique
;
Mortalité
;
Epidémiologie
;
Finlande
;
Registre
;
Homme
;
Europe
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Résumé :
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[BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS nHR0x8Bn. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. This study presents an approach to assess socioeconomic equity in the effectiveness of health services. As an indicator of health system performance we use amenable mortality which captures premature deaths that should not occur in the presence of effective and timely health care. Data on amenable deaths by income groups in Finland in 1992-2008 came from the National Causes of Death Register which was linked to sociodemographic data in population registers. We evaluate the extent of and trends in socioeconomic differences with two widely used inequity indices, the concentration index and the slope index of inequality, and also for different categories of amenable mortality. By categorizing conditions according to the level of intervention associated with the conditions it is possible to evaluate the effect of types of health interventions. Causes of death attributable to specialized and primary care interventions comprise the main groups. By this approach of decomposing equity in amenable mortality in Finland we detected major and increasing socioeconomic inequities and also greater inequity among deaths amenable to specialized health care interventions. Moreover, we saw that inequity increased at a faster pace among deaths amenable to specialized health care interventions yet primary health care interventions made a greater contribution to overall inequity. Although the overall rate of amenable mortality decreased notably during the follow-up, the time trends of socioeconomic differences in amenable health care indicate a substantial increase in inequities in health care in Finland.
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