Seventeen studies covering 83 low-, middle- and high-income countries were accessed, including n = 57,783 adults aged 60 + years. Using the most recent data for each country, the results point to low prevalence (less than 2%) of unmet need for the populations aged 60 + years in Andorra, Qatar, Republic of Korea, Slovenia, Thailand and Viet Nam. Twenty-two countries had prevalence estimates of 30% or higher (see Fig. 2). The prevalence of unmet health care need exceeded 50% in four countries: Georgia, Haiti, Morocco, Rwanda, and Zimbabwe.
Results presented in Figs. 2, 3 and 4 below were grouped by WHO regions (see more information at: www.who.int/about/who-we-are/regional-offices). Figure 2 includes the population aged 60 + years by country and region. The set of countries show gradients in unmet need within each region with the highest country prevalence above 50% in each region except the Western Pacific Region (the Philippines at 37.7%). A wide range in estimates are observed in countries in the African (18.4–67.4%), Eastern Mediterranean (0 to 54.5%) and European (0.5–50.4%) regions.
Figure 2. Prevalence of unmet health care need overall for adults aged 60 + years using the most recent study‡, by country and WHO region.
Results in Figs. 3a and 3b focus on two age groups (60–69 and 70 + years) for men and women, again with countries organized by WHO region. These figures show that the differences between women and men were generally small. Where differences were statistically significant (*) –in the 60–69 year group - five countries had higher rates of unmet need in women than men (Belarus, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Romania and Ukraine), and men in two countries, Algeria and Cyprus, had higher rates than women. In the 70 + age group, five countries had higher rates in women than men (Canada, Gambia, Mexico, New Zealand, and Romania) and men from two countries (Libya and Peru) had higher rates than women. A number of countries had large differences in prevalence rates between men and women – but did not reach statistical significance (likely due to low sample size in these age groups – see Appendix table).
Figure 3a. Prevalence of unmet health care need and for male and female aged 60–69 years using the most recent study‡, by country and WHO region.
Figure 3b. Prevalence of unmet health care need for male and female aged 70 + years using the most recent study*, by country and WHO region.
A number of studies did not include variables that allowed for examination of differences by location of residence, such as urban or rural locations. Where these data were available, many countries had small location-related differences while some had quite large differences (see Figs. 4a and 4b). Where statistically significant differences did exist in the 60–69 year old population (Fig. 4a), one country had higher unmet need in urban areas (Kyrgyzstan), while four countries had higher unmet need in rural areas (Ghana, Mexico, Mongolia, South Africa). For the 70 + population (Fig. 4b), higher unmet need in rural areas was seen in Mexico, Mongolia, Peru, Romania, Russia, and Tunisia.
In both age groups, the studies may have been underpowered to show statistical significance in the prevalence differences by sex and residence (see Appendix 1). Thus, the prevalence may be worth investigating further in larger study samples.
Figure 4a. Prevalence of unmet health care need for urban or rural populations aged 60–69 years using the most recent study‡, by country and WHO region.
Figure 4b. Prevalence of unmet health care need for urban or rural populations aged 70 + years using the most recent study‡, by country and WHO region.
A number of studies in selected countries provided multiple years of data. Graded-colour data points are plotted for countries with data for multiple years (darker for more recent years) in Fig. 5, with a data label for the highest prevalence and year for each country. Countries like Australia, Egypt, Germany, Iraq, Netherlands, New Zealand, Pakistan, Philippines, Tunisia, United States, and Zimbabwe had higher prevalence in more recent years of available data (Fig. 5). Countries like China, Lebanon, Puerto Rico, Republic of Korea, Romania, Russia, and Ukraine may have lower prevalence in more recent years. Mixed patterns are seen in Ghana, Mexico, and Thailand – where a linear pattern of increasing or decreasing did not emerge and would require further investigation into the different tools and methods used to assess unmet need. An uncertain pattern emerges when comparing estimates from different studies within one country that might use different questions or study populations (for example in Brazil and Viet Nam).
Figure 5. Overall prevalence of unmet need in the population aged 60 + years for different years of available data, by country‡
To ensure an equitable path to UHC that includes older adults, a number of issues, including unmet health care need require further investigation and policy action. Leaving aside the complexity of determinants for unmet healthcare needs, currently available data can be used to examine the relationship between unmet need and UHC for policy and planning purposes. Progress toward UHC is being tracked using indices that capture both service coverage and financial protection [15] For example, WHO’s UHC Service Coverage Index incorporates 14 tracer indicators (covering reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health, infectious diseases, non-communicable diseases and service capacity and access) of service coverage into a single summary measure (www.who.int/data/gho/data/indicators/indicator-details/GHO/uhc-index-of-service-coverage). A higher index score suggests a better position for progress towards UHC. Looking at the relationship between unmet need in adults aged 60–69 years and this UHC index, the overall pattern is that levels of unmet health need tend to be lower in countries with higher values of the UHC Service Coverage Index (r=-0.49), at the global and regional levels (Fig. 6). This supports expectations that advancing UHC would lead to reductions in unmet health needs, and conversely, that addressing unmet health needs would improve levels of UHC service coverage.
Figure 6. Point prevalence of self-reported unmet need for healthcare among adults aged 60–69 years, by UHC Service Coverage Index*.
For older adults, continued investment in both health and social care systems strengthening will be required [16] to address both unmet health and social care needs and ensure no one is left behind. However, the relative efficiency with which countries can translate their health spending into improved service coverage and financial protection varies considerably across the region, even in countries at similar levels of development.