Accessibility and Availability of Healthcare Services in Jail Facilities among Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDL) in Dumaguete City, Philippines

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47895/

Keywords:

persons deprived of libert, healthcare services, accessibility, availability

Abstract

Background. Access to prison healthcare and healthcare equity remains poorly understood in the Philippines. With Philippine jail health systems subjected to budgetary restrictions, optimization of efficient mechanisms in healthcare delivery is warranted. This makes understanding how PDLs’ utilization to healthcare services more relavant and of high importance.

Objectives. This study sought to determine healthcare accessibility and explored what influences healthcare access by Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDLs). Additionally, the study looked into whether healthcare was equally accessible to different PDL subgroups. 

Methods. A descriptive-correlational design was employed in recruiting 261 PDLs utilizing stratified random sampling in two jail facilities in Dumaguete City from May to June 2023. Data on healthcare accessibility and availability from self-report survey questionnaires were analyzed using SPSS version 25. 

Results. Hierarchical linear regression analysis shows that, collectively, predisposing factors (age, sex) F=200.82, enabling resources (availability of health services) F=52.52, and perceived needs (physical activities, sleep, diet, and mental health) F=30.24 significantly predict healthcare accessibility, having the availability of healthcare services as the strongest predictor with an R2 change of 43.7% followed by percieved needs (3.9%) and predisposing factor (1.4%), respectively. Furthermore, ordinal logistic regression analysis shows that healthcare by age groups 18-34 (OR=0.379) and 35-54 (OR=0.449) are less likely to be available and accessed than those aged 55 and above. Additionally, availability and accessibility of healthcare are less likely for males (OR=0.24) than females while PDLs with average physical activities (OR=0.87), good (OR=50.7) to average sleep (OR=27.4), and average mental health (OR=0.35) have higher odds of availing and accessing healthcare than their poor counterparts. 

Conclusion. These findings indicate that PDLs tend to access healthcare services based predominantly on availability rather than their desired needs warranting strategies that allow catering to a wide range of health needs in PDL subgroups which ultimately lead to better prison health outcomes. 

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Published

12/08/2025

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Articles

How to Cite

1.
Accessibility and Availability of Healthcare Services in Jail Facilities among Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDL) in Dumaguete City, Philippines. Acta Med Philipp [Internet]. 2025 Dec. 8 [cited 2025 Dec. 8];. Available from: https://luna.upm.edu.ph/index.php/acta/article/view/11884

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