Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Access and coverage of Primary Health Care for rural and urban populations in the northern region of Brazil

ABSTRACT

Access inequities to the Unified Health System compromise the assurance of primary health care for rural populations and other groups in situations of vulnerability. A cross-sectional study that evaluated users' access and coverage of Family Health Teams (FHT) from the seven states of the Northern region of Brazil and that joined the external evaluation of the second cycle of the National Program for Access and Quality Improvement in Primary Care (PMAQ-AB). The PMAQ-AB data were related to demographic, socioeconomic and health indicators, using the Spearman correlation coefficient. For the region as a whole, the assistance coverage of teams based in rural, urban and urban areas that declared covering rural populations was 83.3%. Coverages between 90-100% were found for Acre, Amapá, Roraima and Tocantins. Lower percentages were found in Pará (50.5%) and Amazonas (60.5%). The coverage extension hides geographical access barriers related to the concentration of Family Health Strategy teams in urban areas, a situation that involves 451 (25.3%) units and 494 (22.9%) teams in charge of serving rural populations, but which act in urban area, adding barriers to the arrival of users to the units. Difficulties in welcoming spontaneous demand, appointment scheduling and availability of transportation for care were also reported.

KEYWORDS
Health services accessibility; Rural population; Primary Health Care

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