| Literature DB >> 31683636 |
Chiao-Wen Cheng1, Cheng-Min Feng2, Chian Sem Chua3,4.
Abstract
This paper tracked hepatitis B patients from Medan, Indonesia to Penang, Malaysia under transnational medical care and has an understanding of their medical history and socioeconomic status. The condition of these patients improved as a result of good compliance with medical treatment, including lifestyle adjustment and regular medication. Under the influence of the marketization of healthcare, transnational medical patients in the social structure, based on their economic ability and socioeconomic status, may be expected to experience health inequalities. People with unhealthy medical distribution and weak socioeconomic status are easily prone to diseases due to environmental and social conditions; it is easier for such patients to delay or give up their medical treatment. After continuous tracking and increasing patient exposure to medical knowledge and self-care management opportunities, increasing awareness, screening, care, and treatment, the transmission of hepatitis B can be reduced to enable them to gain upward mobility by their capacities and thus improve their health. Social mobility is deemed the main approach to reduce social inequality. There have been limited medical clinical observations and tracking confirming this theory. This paper, which uses medical observation, confirmed that social mobility is considered as the principal key to reducing inequalities in health.Entities:
Keywords: health inequality; health policy; hepatitis B; social mobility; socioeconomic status
Year: 2019 PMID: 31683636 PMCID: PMC6955930 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare7040125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Medical Outcomes Study Questionnaire Short Form 36 Health Survey [29,30].
| 1. In general, would you say your health is: | |
| Excellent | 1 |
| Very good | 2 |
| Good | 3 |
| Fair | 4 |
| Poor | 5 |
| 2. Compared to one year ago, | |
| Much better now than one year ago | 1 |
| Somewhat better now than one year ago | 2 |
| About the same | 3 |
| Somewhat worse now than one year ago | 4 |
| Much worse now than one year ago | 5 |
The open-ended interview with key informants.
| Questions |
|---|
| 1. What do you think you need to know about hepatitis B? |
| 2. What do you think you need to know about the healthcare services for hepatitis B? |
| 3. Which sources of information do you use most to inform your health seeking? |
| 4. How did you have your test/vaccination/check-up/treatment? |
| 5. What made you have the test/vaccination/check-up/treatment? |
| 6. How do you look after your health in general? |
| 7. Do you have your preferred ways of keeping healthy? If yes, what are they? Why? |
| 8. Under what circumstances will you seek help from health professionals? |
| 9. Do you ever discuss with your doctor regarding your preference of treatment? Why yes, why not? |
| 10. What do you do after seeing a doctor? Will you take the medicine? Why yes, why not? |