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The predictors of self-rated health and the relationship between self-rated health and health service needs are similar across socioeconomic groups in Canada

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Objective — To examine if there are systematic differences in the predictors of self-rated health (SRH) and to examine the relationship between SRH and healthcare utilization across socioeconomic groups.

Study Design and Setting — We used cross-sectional data from the Canadian Community Health Survey linked to the Ontario Health Insurance Plan (N=17,109). We examined relative differences in the factors associated with different levels of SRH across socioeconomic groups (as assessed by education and household income) using probit models separately for men and women. We then examined differences in expected healthcare costs, as assessed by adjusted clinical group weights using administrative healthcare records, between socioeconomic groups within the same level of SRH.

Results — We found limited differences across the predictive ability of a broad range of physical, mental, health service/care utilization, and health behavior variables on SRH across socioeconomic groups. In addition, no differences were found in the expected healthcare utilization costs across socioeconomic groups within the same level of SRH.

Conclusions — The results of this study suggest that SRH assesses a broad variety of factors, including physical health status, mental health status, health service/care utilization, and health behaviors, relatively equally across socioeconomic groups, measured as either education or income.

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Citation

Smith PM, Glazier RH, Sibley LM. J Clin Epidemiol. 2010; 63(4):412-21. Epub 2009 Nov 18.

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