Health Affairs, volume 35, issue 12, pages 2327-2336
In New Survey Of Eleven Countries, US Adults Still Struggle With Access To And Affordability Of Health Care
Robin Osborn
1
,
David Squires
2
,
Michelle M. Doty
3
,
Dana O. Sarnak
4
,
Eric C. Schneider
5
1
Robin Osborn ( ) is vice president of the International Program in Health Policy and Practice Innovations at the Commonwealth Fund, in New York City.
|
2
David Squires is a senior researcher at the Commonwealth Fund.
|
3
Michelle M. Doty is vice president of survey research and evaluation at the Commonwealth Fund.
4
Dana O. Sarnak is a senior research associate in the International Program in Health Policy and Practice Innovations at the Commonwealth Fund.
|
5
Eric C. Schneider is senior vice president for policy and research at the Commonwealth Fund.
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2016-11-18
Journal:
Health Affairs
scimago Q1
SJR: 4.387
CiteScore: 15.0
Impact factor: 8.6
ISSN: 02782715, 15445208
PubMed ID:
27856648
Health Policy
Abstract
Surveys of patients' experiences with health care services can reveal how well a country's health system is meeting the needs of its population. Using data from a 2016 survey conducted in eleven countries-Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States-we found that US adults reported poor health and well-being and were the most likely to experience material hardship. The United States trailed other countries in making health care affordable and ranked poorly on providing timely access to medical care (except specialist care). In all countries, shortfalls in patient engagement and chronic care management were reported, and at least one in five adults experienced a care coordination problem. Problems were often particularly acute for low-income adults. Overall, the Netherlands performed at the top of the eleven-country range on most measures of access, engagement, and coordination.
Found
Are you a researcher?
Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.