TY - JOUR
T1 - Importance of health spending in the Base of the Pyramid (BoP) population in Táchira, Venezuela
AU - Contreras-Velásquez, Julio C.
AU - García-Navarro, Jorge Isaac
AU - Velasquez, Zaida Rocío Contreras
AU - Arias, José Alban Londoño
AU - Albornoz, Neida
AU - Cohen, Miguel Rosario
AU - Contreras, Camilo
AU - Torres, Maritza
AU - Angarita, Lissé
AU - Garcia-Pacheco, Henry
AU - Bermúdez, Valmore
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, Venezuelan Society of Pharmacology and Clinical and Therapeutic Pharmacology. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Introduction. This research analyzes whether health is among the three main expenditures that a household allocates from its income in the population at the base of the pyramid (BoP) and whether there is an association with people belonging to different socioeconomic levels of the BoP in the state of Táchira, Venezuela. Methods. Data was obtained from a structured questionnaire applied to a sample of 1,398 households in the Táchira region, Venezuela, which were classified by socioeconomic levels through the construction of a global synthetic index that, through scales, allows segmenting households by poverty conditions, from the most intense poverty condition to the most favorable non-poverty condition respectively, resulting in 675 households at the base of the pyramid. Results. For households at BoP levels 2 and 3, health expen ditures are presented in greater proportion than in level 1, with a value of 55.74% and 51.77%, respectively, while in level 1 only 26.67% of households included health ex-penditures among the top three, likewise there is evidence of association between the BoP level and the categories of expenditures on housing, public services, health, and education. Conclusions. The results of this research also confirm the theory that the BoP population is heterogeneous due to socio-cultural differences, evidenced in the association that exists between health expenditure and socioeconomic level, when rejecting the hypothesis of independence, which means that the proportion of households that consider health expenditure important varies depending on which level of the BoP they are in.
AB - Introduction. This research analyzes whether health is among the three main expenditures that a household allocates from its income in the population at the base of the pyramid (BoP) and whether there is an association with people belonging to different socioeconomic levels of the BoP in the state of Táchira, Venezuela. Methods. Data was obtained from a structured questionnaire applied to a sample of 1,398 households in the Táchira region, Venezuela, which were classified by socioeconomic levels through the construction of a global synthetic index that, through scales, allows segmenting households by poverty conditions, from the most intense poverty condition to the most favorable non-poverty condition respectively, resulting in 675 households at the base of the pyramid. Results. For households at BoP levels 2 and 3, health expen ditures are presented in greater proportion than in level 1, with a value of 55.74% and 51.77%, respectively, while in level 1 only 26.67% of households included health ex-penditures among the top three, likewise there is evidence of association between the BoP level and the categories of expenditures on housing, public services, health, and education. Conclusions. The results of this research also confirm the theory that the BoP population is heterogeneous due to socio-cultural differences, evidenced in the association that exists between health expenditure and socioeconomic level, when rejecting the hypothesis of independence, which means that the proportion of households that consider health expenditure important varies depending on which level of the BoP they are in.
KW - base of the pyramid
KW - health spending
KW - poverty
KW - socioeconomic level
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85149786392&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5281/zenodo.7625661
DO - 10.5281/zenodo.7625661
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85149786392
SN - 1856-4550
VL - 17
SP - 489
EP - 498
JO - Revista Latinoamericana de Hipertension
JF - Revista Latinoamericana de Hipertension
IS - 7
ER -