Szilagyi P G, Holl J L, Rodewald L E, Shone L P, Zwanziger J, Mukamel D B, Trafton S, Dick A W, Raubertas R F
Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York 14642, USA.
Pediatrics. 2000 Mar;105(3 Suppl E):687-91.
The legislation and funding of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) in 1997 resulted in the largest public investment in child health care in 30 years. The program was designed to provide health insurance for the estimated 11 million uninsured children in the United States. In 1991 New York State implemented a state-funded program-Child Health Plus (CHPlus)-intended to provide health insurance for uninsured children who were ineligible for Medicaid. The program became one of the prototypes for SCHIP: This study was designed to measure the association between CHPlus and access to care, utilization of care, quality of care, and health care costs to understand the potential impact of one type of prototype SCHIP program.
The study took place in the 6-county region of upstate New York around and including the city of Rochester. A before-and-during design was used to compare children's health care for the year before they enrolled in CHPlus versus the first year during enrollment in CHPlus. The study included 1828 children (ages 0-6.99 years at enrollment) who enrolled between November 1, 1991 and August 1, 1993. A substudy involved 187 children 2 to 12.99 years old who had asthma. Data collection involved: 1) interviews of parents to obtain information about demographics, sources of health care, experience and satisfaction with CHPlus, and perceived impact of CHPlus; 2) medical chart reviews at all primary care offices, emergency departments, and health department clinics in the 6-county region to measure utilization of health services; 3) claims analysis to assess costs of care during CHPlus and to impute costs before CHPlus; and 4) analyses of existing datasets including the Current Population Survey, National Health Interview Survey, and statewide hospitalization datasets to anchor the study in relation to the statewide CHPlus population and to assess secular trends in child health care. Logistic regression and Poisson regression were used to compare the means of dependent measures with and without CHPlus coverage, while controlling for age, prior insurance type, and gap in insurance coverage before CHPlus.
Only one third of CHPlus-eligible children throughout New York State had enrolled in the program by 1993. Lower enrollment rates occurred among Hispanic and black children than among white children, and among children from lowest income levels. PROFILE OF CHPlus ENROLLEES: Most enrollees were either previously uninsured, had Medicaid but were no longer eligible, or had parents who either lost a job and related private insurance coverage or could no longer afford commercial or private insurance. Most families heard about CHPlus from a friend, physician, or insurer. Television, radio, and newspaper advertisements were not major sources of information. Nearly all families had at least 1 employed parent. Two thirds of the children resided in 2-parent households. Parents reported that most children were in excellent or good health and only a few were in poor health. The enrolled population was thus a relatively low-risk, generally healthy group of children in low-income, working families. ACCESS AND UTILIZATION OF HEALTH CARE: Utilization of primary care increased dramatically after enrollment in CHPlus, compared with before CHPlus. Visits to primary care medical homes for preventive, acute, and chronic care increased markedly. Visits to medical homes also increased for children with asthma. There was, however, no significant association between enrollment in CHPlus and changes in utilization of emergency departments, specialty services, or inpatient care. QUALITY OF CARE: CHPlus was associated with improvements in many measures involving quality of primary care, including preventive visits, immunization rates, use of the medical home for health care, compliance with preventive guidelines, and parent-reported health status of the child. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)
1997年的《州儿童健康保险计划》(SCHIP)立法及资金投入是30年来对儿童医疗保健最大规模的公共投资。该计划旨在为美国约1100万未参保儿童提供医疗保险。1991年,纽约州实施了一项由州政府资助的计划——儿童健康附加保险(CHPlus),旨在为不符合医疗补助条件的未参保儿童提供医疗保险。该计划成为了SCHIP的原型之一:本研究旨在衡量CHPlus与医疗服务可及性、医疗服务利用情况、医疗质量和医疗保健成本之间的关联,以了解一种SCHIP原型计划的潜在影响。
该研究在纽约州北部包括罗切斯特市在内的6个县的区域开展。采用前后对照设计,比较儿童在加入CHPlus之前一年与加入CHPlus第一年的医疗保健情况。该研究纳入了1991年11月1日至1993年8月1日期间参保的1828名儿童(参保时年龄为0 - 6.99岁)。一项子研究涉及187名2至12.99岁患哮喘的儿童。数据收集包括:1)对家长进行访谈,以获取有关人口统计学、医疗保健来源、对CHPlus的体验和满意度以及对CHPlus感知影响的信息;2)对6个县区域内所有初级保健办公室、急诊科和卫生部门诊所的病历进行审查,以衡量医疗服务的利用情况;3)进行理赔分析,以评估CHPlus期间的医疗费用,并推算CHPlus之前的费用;4)分析现有数据集,包括当前人口调查、国家健康访谈调查和全州住院数据集,以便将该研究与全州CHPlus人群相关联,并评估儿童医疗保健的长期趋势。使用逻辑回归和泊松回归来比较有和没有CHPlus保险覆盖的情况下相关指标的均值,同时控制年龄、先前的保险类型以及CHPlus之前的保险覆盖缺口。
到1993年,纽约州符合CHPlus参保条件的儿童中只有三分之一参保。西班牙裔和黑人儿童的参保率低于白人儿童,且最低收入水平家庭的儿童参保率较低。CHPlus参保者概况:大多数参保者此前未参保,或曾有医疗补助但不再符合条件,或其父母失去工作及相关私人保险覆盖,或无力再负担商业或私人保险。大多数家庭是从朋友、医生或保险公司听说CHPlus的。电视、广播和报纸广告并非主要信息来源。几乎所有家庭至少有1名就业家长。三分之二的儿童居住在双亲家庭。家长报告说,大多数儿童健康状况极佳或良好,只有少数健康状况不佳。因此,参保人群是低收入在职家庭中相对低风险、总体健康的儿童群体。医疗服务的可及性和利用情况:与加入CHPlus之前相比,加入CHPlus后初级保健的利用显著增加。前往初级保健医疗之家进行预防、急性和慢性护理的就诊显著增加。哮喘儿童前往医疗之家的就诊也有所增加。然而,加入CHPlus与急诊科、专科服务或住院护理利用情况的变化之间没有显著关联。医疗质量:CHPlus与许多涉及初级保健质量的指标改善相关,包括预防性就诊、免疫接种率、利用医疗之家进行医疗保健、遵守预防指南以及家长报告的儿童健康状况。(摘要截取)