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家庭收入以及儿童健康保险计划对报告的医疗服务需求和未满足的医疗需求的影响。

Family income and the impact of a children's health insurance program on reported need for health services and unmet health need.

作者信息

Feinberg Emily, Swartz Kathy, Zaslavsky Alan, Gardner Jane, Walker Deborah Klein

机构信息

Department of Maternal and Child Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.

出版信息

Pediatrics. 2002 Feb;109(2):E29. doi: 10.1542/peds.109.2.e29.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

In an era when expanding publicly funded health insurance to children in higher income families has been the major strategy to increase access to health care for children, it is important to determine if the benefits to higher income children attributable to the receipt of health coverage are similar to those observed for lower income children. This study investigated how the likely impact of child health insurance expansions varies with family income.

METHODS

We surveyed parents or guardians of children who were enrolled in a state-sponsored health insurance program (Massachusetts Children's Medical Security Plan [CMSP]) that, before the implementation of the State Children's Health Insurance Plan (SCHIP), was open to all children regardless of income. A stratified sample of children was drawn from administrative files. We grouped children by income category (low-income [LI]: < or =133% of the federal poverty limit [FPL], middle-income [MI]: 134%-200% of the FPL, high-income [HI]: >200% of the FPL) that corresponded to eligibility for public health insurance programs in the state (Medicaid-eligible, SCHIP-eligible, and income that exceeded SCHIP eligibility). The majority of telephone interviews were conducted between November 1998 and March 1999. The overall response rate was 61.8%, yielding a sample of 996 children. The CSMP benefit package included comprehensive coverage for preventive and specialty care and limited coverage for ancillary services. Children enrolled in CMSP were not covered for inpatient hospital stays but those whose family income was <400% of the FPL were eligible to receive full or partial coverage for inpatient care through the state's free care pool. Although the CMSP benefit package did not meet the standards for a SCHIP, it is an approximate equivalent for children with incomes <200% of the FPL, who have full coverage for hospitalization through the state's free care pool. We used survey responses to develop 2 sets of indicators: the first for reported need for services and the second for unmet need or delays in care among children whose parents reported a need for the service. Within each set, we created indicators for 5 types of service (medical care, dental care, prescription drugs, vision services, and mental health care) and an additional composite indicator. The composite indicator aggregated all categories of services covered under CMSP in a single measure; it included all services except dental services, which, at the time of the study, were not covered by the program. The composite indicator served as the dependent variable in regression models. We used weighted chi2 tests to identify statistically significant differences in reported need and unmet need for the 5 types of medical services and the aggregate measure of all services covered by CMSP. We examined differences across income groups at 2 points in time: during the period children were uninsured before enrollment and while enrolled. We used weighted logistic regression to assess the independent association of family income with our dependent variables: reported need for health services and the presence of unmet need, controlling for other covariates. To evaluate the impact of participation in a child health insurance program, we examined unmet need before and after program enrollment, testing for statistical significance using McNemar's test for within-subject changes.

RESULTS

During the period of uninsurance before enrollment, prescription drugs (70%) was the health service needed most frequently, followed by medical (65%) and dental (57%) care. For the composite measure of services covered by CMSP, reported need for services was not significantly different by income. Need for medical care, dental care, and prescription drugs were significantly greater among children who had been uninsured for >6 months before enrollment. In addition, a significantly greater proportion of adolescent participants needed dental, vision, and mental health services than younger enrollees. While enrolled, among recently enrolled children, 77% need medical services, 68% prescription drugs, and 59% dental. In unadjusted models MI and HI children were more than 2 times as likely to report need for covered services as LI children. After adjusting for possible confounders, the effect of income was no longer significant. Instead, nonadolescents (odds ratio [OR]: 2.44; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.25-4.76) and children with white ethnicity (OR: 3.03; 95% CI: 1.43-6.67) were significantly more likely to report need for services. Before enrollment, unmet need among those who reported need for services was 5% for medical, 4% prescription drugs, 31% dental, 30% vision, and 33% mental health. For the composite measure of services covered by CMSP, LI children were significantly more likely to have had unmet need before enrollment than MI and HI children (20%, 10%, 7% by income). As compared with younger children, adolescents also had significantly greater unmet need for the composite measure (19% vs 10%). In multivariate models, not having a usual site of care was a highly significant predictor of unmet need or delayed care (OR: 3.41; 95% CI: 1.28-9.11). Ninety-eight percent of parents cited cost as the reason they had difficulty obtaining needed care. After enrollment, the proportion of children who needed care and had difficulty obtaining it decreased for all categories of care. Less than 1% of enrollees reported unmet need or delays in care for medical services and 3% for prescription drugs. Children who needed vision and mental health services continued to experience difficulty obtaining these services (17% for each category of care), although they were covered as part of the benefit package. Unmet need or delays in care for dental services, which at the time of the study were not covered under CMSP, remained high (27%). We found a significant reduction in unmet need among children in all income groups and no significant differences in unmet need by income. Controlling for other covariates, adolescents (OR: 3.11; 95% CI: 1.58-6.12) and children with compromised health (OR: 3.20; 95% CI: 1.35-7.58) were more likely to have had difficulty obtaining needed services while enrolled in the program. Children in larger families (OR: 0.40; 95% CI: 0.17-0.96) and who were previously uninsured for >6 months (OR: 0.45; 95% CI: 0.22-7.58) were less likely to have difficulty obtaining care.

CONCLUSION

Our findings demonstrate the positive impact of providing health insurance coverage to children regardless of income. The HI children who enrolled in the program looked similar to children with incomes that meet current SCHIP eligibility guidelines, suggesting that expansions of SCHIPs to HI children should not qualitatively change the program dynamics.

摘要

目的

在将公共资助的医疗保险扩大到高收入家庭儿童已成为增加儿童获得医疗保健机会的主要策略的时代,确定获得医疗保险给高收入儿童带来的益处是否与低收入儿童所观察到的相似非常重要。本研究调查了儿童医疗保险扩大的可能影响如何随家庭收入而变化。

方法

我们对参加州资助医疗保险计划(马萨诸塞州儿童医疗保障计划[CMSP])的儿童的父母或监护人进行了调查,在州儿童健康保险计划(SCHIP)实施之前,该计划对所有儿童开放,无论其收入如何。从行政档案中抽取了分层的儿童样本。我们按收入类别对儿童进行分组(低收入[LI]:≤联邦贫困线[FPL]的133%,中等收入[MI]:FPL的134%-200%,高收入[HI]:>FPL的200%),这与该州公共医疗保险计划的资格相对应(符合医疗补助资格、符合SCHIP资格以及超过SCHIP资格的收入)。大多数电话访谈在1998年11月至1999年3月之间进行。总体回复率为61.8%,产生了996名儿童的样本。CSMP福利套餐包括预防和专科护理的全面覆盖以及附属服务的有限覆盖。参加CMSP的儿童不包括住院治疗,但家庭收入<FPL的400%的儿童有资格通过该州的免费护理池获得全部或部分住院护理覆盖。尽管CMSP福利套餐不符合SCHIP的标准,但对于收入<FPL的200%的儿童来说,它大致相当,这些儿童通过该州的免费护理池获得住院全额覆盖。我们使用调查回复来制定两组指标:第一组用于报告的服务需求,第二组用于父母报告需要服务的儿童中未满足的需求或护理延迟。在每组中,我们为5种服务类型(医疗护理、牙科护理、处方药、视力服务和心理健康护理)以及一个额外的综合指标创建了指标。综合指标将CMSP涵盖的所有服务类别汇总为一个单一指标;它包括除牙科服务之外的所有服务,在研究时,该计划不涵盖牙科服务。综合指标在回归模型中作为因变量。我们使用加权卡方检验来确定5种医疗服务类型以及CMSP涵盖的所有服务的汇总指标在报告需求和未满足需求方面的统计学显著差异。我们在两个时间点检查了收入组之间的差异:在儿童入学前未参保期间和参保期间。我们使用加权逻辑回归来评估家庭收入与我们的因变量(报告的医疗服务需求和未满足需求的存在)之间的独立关联,同时控制其他协变量。为了评估参与儿童医疗保险计划的影响,我们检查了计划入学前后的未满足需求,使用麦克内马尔检验进行受试者内变化的统计学显著性测试。

结果

在入学前未参保期间,处方药(70%)是最常需要的医疗服务,其次是医疗(65%)和牙科(57%)护理。对于CMSP涵盖的服务综合指标,报告的服务需求在收入方面没有显著差异。在入学前未参保超过6个月的儿童中,对医疗护理、牙科护理和处方药的需求显著更大。此外,青少年参与者中需要牙科、视力和心理健康服务的比例明显高于年幼儿童。参保期间,在最近参保的儿童中,77%需要医疗服务,68%需要处方药,59%需要牙科服务。在未调整的模型中,MI和HI儿童报告需要涵盖服务的可能性是LI儿童的两倍多。在调整了可能的混杂因素后,收入的影响不再显著。相反,非青少年(优势比[OR]:2.44;95%置信区间[CI]:1.25-4.76)和白人儿童(OR:3.03;95%CI:1.43-6.67)报告需要服务的可能性显著更高。入学前,报告需要服务的人中,医疗服务的未满足需求为5%,处方药为4%,牙科为31%,视力为30%,心理健康为33%。对于CMSP涵盖的服务综合指标,LI儿童在入学前未满足需求的可能性显著高于MI和HI儿童(按收入分别为20%、10%、7%)。与年幼儿童相比,青少年在综合指标方面的未满足需求也显著更大(19%对10%)。在多变量模型中,没有常规护理地点是未满足需求或护理延迟的高度显著预测因素(OR:3.41;95%CI:1.28-9.11)。98%的父母将费用作为他们难以获得所需护理的原因。入学后,所有护理类别的需要护理且难以获得护理的儿童比例均下降。不到1%的参保儿童报告医疗服务存在未满足需求或护理延迟,处方药为3%。需要视力和心理健康服务的儿童继续难以获得这些服务(每个护理类别为17%),尽管它们作为福利套餐的一部分被涵盖。在研究时CMSP未涵盖的牙科服务的未满足需求或护理延迟仍然很高(27%)。我们发现所有收入组儿童的未满足需求都有显著减少,且未满足需求在收入方面没有显著差异。在控制其他协变量后,青少年(OR:3.11;95%CI:1.58-6.12)和健康状况不佳的儿童(OR:3.20;95%CI:1.35-7.58)在参保计划期间更有可能难以获得所需服务。大家庭中的儿童(OR:0.40;95%CI:0.17-0.96)和之前未参保超过6个月的儿童(OR:0.45;95%CI:0.22-7.58)难以获得护理的可能性较小。

结论

我们的研究结果表明,无论收入如何,为儿童提供医疗保险覆盖都有积极影响。参加该计划的高收入儿童看起来与符合当前SCHIP资格指南的收入儿童相似,这表明将SCHIP扩大到高收入儿童不应在质量上改变计划动态。

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