## Abstract Our main hypothesis in this paper was that, once controlled for age and gender, the use of primary health care services of people in each of the groups defined by their degree of obesity (i.e. normal weight, overweight and obese) did not correspond to the need for care implied by the le
Determinants of health status and the influence of primary health care services in Latin America, 1990–98
✍ Scribed by David Moore; Eliana Castillo; Chris Richardson; Robert J. Reid
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 90 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0749-6753
- DOI
- 10.1002/hpm.731
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Primary health care (PHC) services have been advocated as a means by which less developed countries may improve the health of their populations even in the face of poverty, low levels of literacy, poor nutrition and other factors that negatively influence health status. Using aggregated data from the World Bank and UNICEF this study examined which factors, both within the health care system and outside of it, are associated with under‐5 mortality rates in 22 countries of Latin America and the Caribbean during the 1990s. In a multivariate analysis using generalized estimating equations for repeated measures, five factors were found to be independent predictors of lower under‐5 mortality rates (U5MRs). These were vaccination levels, female literacy, the use of oral rehydration therapy, access to safe water and GNP per capita. When the magnitude of these associations were assessed, higher levels of GNP per capita was found to be very weakly associated with lower U5MRs, compared with female literacy and vaccination rates. These findings suggest that government policies which focus only on promoting economic growth, while not making important investments in PHC services, female education and access to safe water are unlikely to see large improvements in health status. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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