4.4 Article

Disability, caregiver's dependency and patterns of access to rehabilitation care: results from a national representative study in Peru

Journal

DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION
Volume 38, Issue 6, Pages 582-588

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.3109/09638288.2015.1051246

Keywords

Activities of daily living; care; care givers; Peru

Categories

Funding

  1. CRONICAS Center of Excellence in Chronic Diseases at Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, in Lima, Peru
  2. Wellcome Trust Research Training Fellowship in Public Health and Tropical Medicine [103994/Z/14/Z]
  3. Sociedad y Discapacidad - SODIS, Lima Peru

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Purpose: To determine the prevalence of disability in Peru, explore dependency on caregiver's assistance and assess access to rehabilitation care. Method: Data from Disability National Survey (ENEDIS), including urban and rural areas, were analyzed. Disability was defined as a permanent limitation on movement, vision, communication, hearing, learning/remembering or social relationships. Dependency was defined as the self-reported need for a caregiver to help with daily activities; and access to rehabilitation care was defined as the self-report of any therapy for disabilities. Estimates and projections were calculated using sample strata, primary sampling units and population weights, and prevalence ratios (PRs) and 95%CI were reported. Results: From 798308 people screened, 37524 (5.1%; 95%CI 4.9--5.2%) had at least one disability. A total of 37117 were included in further analysis, mean age 57.8 (SD24.1) years, 52.1% women. Dependency was self-reported by 14980 (40.5%; 95%CI: 39.2-41.9%) individuals with disabilities. A family member, usually female, was identified as a caregiver in 94.3% (95%CI: 93.3-95.3%) of dependent participants. Only 2881 (10.7%; 95%CI: 9.7-11.9%) of people with disabilities reported access to rehabilitation care. Major inequality patterns of disability burden versus access to rehabilitation care were observed by age and education level. Older age groups had higher disability burden yet lower chances of access to rehabilitation care. Conversely, the higher the education level, the lesser the overall disability burden but also the higher chances of reporting receiving care. Private healthcare insurance doubled the probability of having access to rehabilitation compared with those without insurance. Conclusions: Approximately 1.6 million Peruvians have at least one disability, and 40% of them require assistance with daily activities. Informal caregiving, likely female and relative-provided, is highly common. Rehabilitation care access is low and inequitable. Our results signal a major need to implement strategies to guarantee the highest standard of health care for people with disabilities.

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