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Scientific article
Open access
English

General and Vulnerable Population’s Satisfaction With the Healthcare System in Urban and Rural Areas: Findings From the European Social Survey

Published inInternational journal of public health, vol. 67, 1604300
Publication date2022-03-08
First online date2022-03-08
Abstract

Introduction: Access to the healthcare system when patients are vulnerable and living outside metropolitan areas can be challenging. Our objective was to explore healthcare system satisfaction of urban and rural inhabitants depending on financial and health vulnerabilities.

Methods: Repeated cross-sectional data from 353,523 European citizens (2002–2016). Multivariable associations between rural areas, vulnerability factors and satisfaction with the healthcare system were assessed with linear mixed regressions and adjusted with sociodemographic and control factors.

Results: In unadjusted analysis, the people who lived in houses in the countryside and those who lived in the suburbs were the most satisfied with the healthcare system. In the adjusted model, residents living in big cities had the highest satisfaction. Financial and health vulnerabilities were associated with less satisfaction with the healthcare system, with a different effect according to the area of residence: the presence of health vulnerability was more negatively correlated with the healthcare system satisfaction of big city inhabitants, whereas financial vulnerability was more negatively correlated with the satisfaction of those living in countryside homes.

Conclusion: Vulnerable residents, depending on their area of residence, may require special attention to increase their satisfaction with the healthcare system.

eng
Keywords
  • Ealthcare system
  • Vulnerability
  • Satisfaction
  • Urban
  • Rural
  • Europe
Citation (ISO format)
RIGHI, Lorenzo et al. General and Vulnerable Population’s Satisfaction With the Healthcare System in Urban and Rural Areas: Findings From the European Social Survey. In: International journal of public health, 2022, vol. 67, p. 1604300. doi: 10.3389/ijph.2022.1604300
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Identifiers
ISSN of the journal1661-8556
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Creation03/08/2022 6:47:00 PM
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