OBJECTIVE: To assess accessibility and affordability of health care in eight countries of the former Soviet Union. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Primary data collection conducted in 2010 in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional household survey using multistage stratified random sampling. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: Data were collected using standardized questionnaires with subjects aged 18+ on demographic, socioeconomic, and health care access characteristics. Descriptive and multivariate regression analyses were used. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Almost half of respondents who had a health problem in the previous month which they viewed as needing care had not sought ca...
Over the past twenty years, Uzbekistan’s health system changed drastically from the inherited Soviet...
Out-of-pocket payments for health services constitute a major financial burden for patients in Centr...
After the fall of communism, the healthcare systems of Central and Eastern European countries underw...
BACKGROUND: In the past decade, the countries that emerged from the Soviet Union have experienced ma...
Most countries of the Former Soviet Union (FSU) have either initiated or are contemplating reform of...
The study investigated the magnitude and structure of health care access barriers and utilisation in...
Background The study examines health-care accessibility in eastern Europe through the lens of indiv...
OBJECTIVE: Throughout the 1990s, the Soviet-style model in central and eastern Europe that provided ...
Within the countries of the former Soviet Union, the Kyrgyz Republic has been a pioneer in reforming...
The health systems of countries of the Former Soviet Union are all based on Semashko's system, which...
The transition resulting from the break-up of the Soviet Union significantly affected the health car...
This publication presents tables summarizing the distribution of health, health behaviour, health ca...
The break-up of the former Soviet Union has created a greater realisation of the health and health c...
Summary: This article examines primary care reforms in countries of the former Soviet Union. It plac...
This article is an updated version of the previous edition article by Dina Balabanova, Richard Coker...
Over the past twenty years, Uzbekistan’s health system changed drastically from the inherited Soviet...
Out-of-pocket payments for health services constitute a major financial burden for patients in Centr...
After the fall of communism, the healthcare systems of Central and Eastern European countries underw...
BACKGROUND: In the past decade, the countries that emerged from the Soviet Union have experienced ma...
Most countries of the Former Soviet Union (FSU) have either initiated or are contemplating reform of...
The study investigated the magnitude and structure of health care access barriers and utilisation in...
Background The study examines health-care accessibility in eastern Europe through the lens of indiv...
OBJECTIVE: Throughout the 1990s, the Soviet-style model in central and eastern Europe that provided ...
Within the countries of the former Soviet Union, the Kyrgyz Republic has been a pioneer in reforming...
The health systems of countries of the Former Soviet Union are all based on Semashko's system, which...
The transition resulting from the break-up of the Soviet Union significantly affected the health car...
This publication presents tables summarizing the distribution of health, health behaviour, health ca...
The break-up of the former Soviet Union has created a greater realisation of the health and health c...
Summary: This article examines primary care reforms in countries of the former Soviet Union. It plac...
This article is an updated version of the previous edition article by Dina Balabanova, Richard Coker...
Over the past twenty years, Uzbekistan’s health system changed drastically from the inherited Soviet...
Out-of-pocket payments for health services constitute a major financial burden for patients in Centr...
After the fall of communism, the healthcare systems of Central and Eastern European countries underw...