Shields Alexandra E, Finkelstein Jonathan A, Comstock Catherine, Weiss Kevin B
Institute for Health Care Research and Policy, Georgetown Public Policy Institute, Georgetown University, 2233 Wisconsin Avenue NW, Suite 525, Washington, DC 20007, USA.
Med Care. 2002 Apr;40(4):303-14. doi: 10.1097/00005650-200204000-00006.
To compare the process of care received by Medicaid-enrolled children with asthma served by community health centers (CHCs) and other Medicaid providers.
Retrospective cohort study.
Five provider types serving Massachusetts Medicaid enrollees: three provider groups--CHCs, hospital outpatient departments (OPDs), and solo/group physicians--participating in the statewide Primary Care Clinician Plan; a staff model health maintenance organization (HMO); and fee-for-service (FFS) providers.
Six thousand three hundred twenty-one Medicaid-enrolled children (age 2-18) with asthma assigned to one of the above provider types in 1994.
Person-level files were constructed by linking Medicaid claims, demographic and enrollment files with HMO encounter data.
Five claims-based process of care measures reflecting aspects of care recommended in national guidelines were developed and used to analyze patterns of care across provider types, controlling for case-mix and other covariates.
Children served by CHCs and the HMO had significantly higher asthma visit rates compared with those served by OPDs, solo/group physicians and FFS providers. CHCs emergency department (ED) visit rates for asthma were lower than those of OPDs (P <0.001) and similar to other providers. However, CHC patients averaged more asthma hospitalizations relative to solo/group physicians or the HMO (P <0.0001). In multivariate analyses, children served by CHCs were 2.2 times as likely (95% CI, 1.02-4.91) as those served by solo/group physicians to receive a follow-up visit within 5 days of an asthma ED visit and 4.3 times as likely (95% CI, 1.45-12.68) to receive a follow-up visit within 5 days of hospital discharge. CHC patients with utilization suggestive of persistent asthma were less likely (OR, 0.28; 95% CI, 0.13-0.59) than those served by solo/group physicians to be seen by an asthma specialist. There were no significant differences in measures of asthma pharmacotherapy across providers types.
These data suggest that CHCs provide more timely follow-up care after an asthma ED visit or hospitalization relative to solo/group physicians, but diminished access to asthma specialists. There were no differences in asthma pharmacology across providers. Relatively low access to asthma specialists among children served by CHCs warrants further investigation.
比较社区卫生中心(CHC)及其他医疗补助提供者为参加医疗补助计划的哮喘儿童提供的护理过程。
回顾性队列研究。
为马萨诸塞州医疗补助计划参保者服务的五种提供者类型:三个提供者组——社区卫生中心、医院门诊部(OPD)以及个体/团体医生——参与全州初级保健临床医生计划;一个员工模式健康维护组织(HMO);以及按服务收费(FFS)提供者。
1994年被分配到上述提供者类型之一的6321名参加医疗补助计划的哮喘儿童(2至18岁)。
通过将医疗补助理赔、人口统计学和参保档案与健康维护组织就诊数据相链接构建个人层面的档案。
制定了五项基于理赔的护理过程指标,反映国家指南中推荐的护理方面,并用于分析不同提供者类型的护理模式,同时控制病例组合和其他协变量。
与由医院门诊部、个体/团体医生和按服务收费提供者服务的儿童相比,由社区卫生中心和健康维护组织服务的儿童哮喘就诊率显著更高。社区卫生中心哮喘患者的急诊科(ED)就诊率低于医院门诊部(P<0.001),与其他提供者相似。然而,相对于个体/团体医生或健康维护组织,社区卫生中心患者的哮喘住院平均次数更多(P<0.0001)。在多变量分析中,社区卫生中心服务的儿童在哮喘急诊就诊后5天内接受随访的可能性是个体/团体医生服务儿童的2.2倍(95%CI,1.02 - 4.91),在出院后5天内接受随访的可能性是其4.3倍(95%CI,1.45 - 12.68)。提示持续性哮喘的社区卫生中心患者被哮喘专科医生诊治的可能性低于个体/团体医生服务的患者(OR,0.28;95%CI,0.13 - 0.59)。不同提供者类型在哮喘药物治疗指标方面无显著差异。
这些数据表明,相对于个体/团体医生,社区卫生中心在哮喘急诊就诊或住院后提供更及时的随访护理,但哮喘专科医生的可及性降低。不同提供者在哮喘药物治疗方面无差异。社区卫生中心服务的儿童中哮喘专科医生可及性相对较低,值得进一步研究。