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What Makes Vietnamese (Not) Attend Periodic General Health Examinations? A 2016 Cross-sectional Study

Overview
Specialty Public Health
Date 2017 May 26
PMID 28540159
Citations 2
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Abstract

Objectives: General health examinations (GHE) have become an increasingly common measure for preventive medicine in Vietnam. However, little is known about the factors among Viet-namese people who attend or miss GHE. Budget or time constraints remain to be evaluated for better-informed policy making. This study investigates factors affecting behaviors in attending periodic GHE. The main objectives are as follows: (1) to explore empirical relationships between influencing factors and periodic GHE frequencies, and (2) to predict the probabilities of attending GHE under associated conditions.

Methods: The study used a 2,068-observational dataset, obtained from a Vietnamese survey in 2016. The analysis was then performed using the methods of baseline-category logits for establishing relationships between predictor and response variables.

Results: Significant relationships were found among the expenditure and time consumption, health priority and sensitivity to health data, insurance status, and frequency of GHE, with most -values = 0.01.

Conclusion: Generally, people attended the GHE when they had the resources and health priorities (72.7% probability). Expenditure and time remain key obstacles to the periodic GHE. Health priority and health data are important in improving rates for GHEs. Health insurance should play a positive role in promoting the GHE.

Citing Articles

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Miyawaki C, Garcia J, Nguyen K, Ta Park V, Markides K J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2023; 11(3):1800-1807.

PMID: 37249829 PMC: 11006017. DOI: 10.1007/s40615-023-01652-z.


Health Care Payments in Vietnam: Patients' Quagmire of Caring for Health versus Economic Destitution.

Pekerti A, Vuong Q, Ho T, Vuong T Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2017; 14(10).

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