Socioeconomic Inequality
Cross-source consensus on Socioeconomic Inequality from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- People with financial difficulty consistently reported higher antibiotic use than people without financial difficulty. — Socioeconomic inequalities in the self-reported use of antibiotics in the European Union, 2009–2022: a repeated cross-sectional analysis
- Financial difficulty was associated with higher odds of inappropriate antibiotic access. — Socioeconomic inequalities in the self-reported use of antibiotics in the European Union, 2009–2022: a repeated cross-sectional analysis
- Financial difficulty was associated with higher odds of antibiotic use in the overall regression model. — Socioeconomic inequalities in the self-reported use of antibiotics in the European Union, 2009–2022: a repeated cross-sectional analysis
- Financial difficulty was associated with both reduced need for antibiotics and restricted access during the pandemic. — Socioeconomic inequalities in the self-reported use of antibiotics in the European Union, 2009–2022: a repeated cross-sectional analysis
- Universal healthcare alone is unlikely to eliminate socioeconomic inequalities in antibiotic use and knowledge. — Socioeconomic inequalities in the self-reported use of antibiotics in the European Union, 2009–2022: a repeated cross-sectional analysis