Factors Associated with Lack of Health Screening among People with Disabilities Using Andersen's Behavioral Model

Healthcare (Basel). 2023 Feb 23;11(5):656. doi: 10.3390/healthcare11050656.

Abstract

People with disabilities often have poorer health than the general population, and many do not participate in preventive care. This study aimed to identify the health screening participation rates of such individuals and investigate why they did not receive preventive medical services based on Andersen's behavioral model, using data from the Survey on Handicapped Persons with Disabilities. The non-participation health screening rate for people with disabilities was 69.1%. Many did not in health screening because they showed no symptoms and were considered healthy, in addition to poor transportation service and economic limitations. The binary logistic regression result indicates that younger age, lower level education, and unmarried as predisposing characteristics; non-economic activity as the enabling resources; and no chronic diseases, severe disability grade, and suicidal ideation as need factor variables were the strongest determinants of non-participation health screening. This indicates that health screening of people with disabilities should be promoted while takings into account the large individual differences in socioeconomic status and disability characteristics. It is particularly necessary to prioritize ways to adjust need factors such as chronic disease and mental health management, rather than focusing on uncontrollable predisposing characteristics and enabling resources among barriers to participation in health screening for people with disabilities.

Keywords: Andersen’s behavior model; health screening; people with disabilities.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by a grant from the Ministry of Health & Welfare in South Korea, grant number 2022-2023 MOHW.