Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, University of Zambia, Ridgeway Campus, Lusaka, P.O. Box 50110, Zambia.
Department of Economics, School of Humanities and Social Science, Great East Road Campus, Lusaka, P.O Box 32379, Zambia.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Apr 12;24(1):1025. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-18429-6.
Hypertension affects over one billion people globally and is one of the leading causes of premature death. Low- and middle-income countries, especially the sub-Saharan Africa region, bear a disproportionately higher share of hypertension globally. Recent evidence shows a steady shift in the burden of hypertension from more affluent and urban populations towards poorer and rural communities. Our study examined inequalities in self-rated health (SRH) among people with hypertension and whether there is a rural‒urban gap in the health of these patients. We then quantified factors driving the health gap. We also examined how much HIV accounts for differences in self-rated health among hypertension patients due to the relationship between HIV, hypertension and health in sub-Saharan Africa.
We utilized the Zambia Household Health Expenditure and Utilization Survey for data on SRH and other demographic and socioeconomic controls. District HIV prevalence information was from the Zambia Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment (ZAMPHIA) survey. We applied the Linear Probability Model to assess the association between self-rated health and independent variables as a preliminary step. We then used the Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition to identify self-rated health inequality between urban and rural patients and determine determinants of the health gap between the two groups.
Advanced age, lower education and low district HIV prevalence were significantly associated with poor health rating among hypertension patients. The decomposition analysis indicated that 45.5% of urban patients and 36.9% of rural patients reported good self-rated health, representing a statistically significant health gap of 8.6%. Most of the identified health gap can be attributed to endowment effects, with education (73.6%), district HIV prevalence (30.8%) and household expenditure (4.8%) being the most important determinants that explain the health gap.
Urban hypertension patients have better SRH than rural patients in Zambia. Education, district HIV prevalence and household expenditure were the most important determinants of the health gap between rural and urban hypertension patients. Policies aimed at promoting educational interventions, improving access to financial resources and strengthening hypertension health services, especially in rural areas, can significantly improve the health of rural patients, and potentially reduce health inequalities between the two regions.
高血压影响着全球超过 10 亿人,是导致过早死亡的主要原因之一。中低收入国家,尤其是撒哈拉以南非洲地区,在全球高血压负担中所占比例过高。最近的证据表明,高血压的负担从较为富裕和城市人口向较贫穷和农村社区转移。我们的研究考察了高血压患者自我报告健康状况(SRH)方面的不平等现象,以及这些患者的健康状况是否存在城乡差距。然后,我们量化了导致健康差距的因素。我们还研究了由于 HIV、高血压和撒哈拉以南非洲健康之间的关系,HIV 在多大程度上导致了高血压患者自我报告健康状况的差异。
我们利用赞比亚家庭健康支出和利用调查的数据来评估 SRH 和其他人口统计学和社会经济控制因素。地区 HIV 流行率信息来自赞比亚基于人群的 HIV 影响评估(ZAMPHIA)调查。我们应用线性概率模型来评估自我报告健康状况与自变量之间的关联,作为初步步骤。然后,我们使用 Blinder-Oaxaca 分解来确定城乡高血压患者之间的自我报告健康不平等,并确定两组之间健康差距的决定因素。
年龄较大、教育程度较低和地区 HIV 流行率较低与高血压患者健康状况较差显著相关。分解分析表明,45.5%的城市患者和 36.9%的农村患者报告自我健康状况良好,这表明存在 8.6%的统计学显著健康差距。大部分确定的健康差距可归因于禀赋效应,其中教育(73.6%)、地区 HIV 流行率(30.8%)和家庭支出(4.8%)是解释健康差距的最重要决定因素。
在赞比亚,城市高血压患者的 SRH 优于农村患者。教育、地区 HIV 流行率和家庭支出是城乡高血压患者健康差距的最重要决定因素。旨在促进教育干预、改善获得财政资源的机会和加强高血压卫生服务的政策,特别是在农村地区,可以显著改善农村患者的健康状况,并有可能减少两个地区之间的健康不平等。