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Access to health care in South Africa - the influence of race and class


R Lalloo
MJ Smith
NG Myburgh
GC Solanki

Abstract

Objectives. The first democratic government elected in South Africa in 1994 inherited huge inequities in  health status and health provision across all sections of the population. This study set out to assess the  impact of the new government's commitment to address these inequities and implement policies to  improve population health in general and address inequalities in health care in particular.

Design. A 1998  household survey assessed many aspects of health delivery, including their own perceived and actual access to health care among different segments of South African society.

Results. Race was the main predictor of perceived changes in access to health care, with black, coloured and Indian respondents significantly more likely to feel that access had improved since 1994, compared with white respondents. Socio-economic status (SES) was the main predictor of actual access to health care, with low and middle  SES classes significantly less likely to access care when ill.

Conclusions. One-third of  respondents perceived health care access to have improved between 1994 and 1998, and this response was partially determined along racial lines. About one-quarter reported an inability to access health care when they required it, and this response was partially determined along socio-economic lines. This set of contrasting responses suggests that at a political level perceptions are largely influenced by race, but at the operational level actual access is influenced by SES.

 


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2078-5135
print ISSN: 0256-9574