Byck Gayle R, Walton Surrey M, Cooksey Judith A
Illinois Regional Health Workforce Center, University of Illinois at Chicago, 60607, USA.
J Rural Health. 2002 Fall;18(4):512-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.2002.tb00918.x.
Poor oral health status and limited access to dental care have been recognized as problems for children from Medicaid and low-income families. However, little is known about dental access for Medicaid-enrolled children in rural areas. This study examines differences between rural and urban counties in dental utilization rates of Illinois children enrolled in either Medicaid or the Children's Health Insurance Program. How the overall dentist supply, the dentist Medicaid participation rate, and county level sociodemographic factors relate to Medicaid dental utilization are examined. Illinois counties were aggregated into four urban/rural categories. Descriptive analysis showed lower utilization rates in the rural categories (25 and 27%) compared with the metropolitan categories (35 and 31%). Rural areas had a substantially lower supply of dentists, and consequently a lower supply of dentists participating in Medicaid, despite the substantially higher Medicaid participation rate of dentists in the rural categories (45 and 51%) than in the metropolitan categories (22 and 32%). However, regression results indicated no significant relationship between the rate of utilization of Medicaid-enrolled children and rural status after controlling for several dental supply and population factors. The most important factors relating to Medicaid-enrolled children's dental utilization, regardless of urban or rural status, were the proportion of children enrolled in Medicaid and the participating dentist to population ratio. Without the high participation rate of dentists in rural areas, access to oral health care for rural children enrolled in Medicaid would have been worse. Policy makers should focus on maintaining high rural dentist participation rates as well as addressing future supply problems that may exacerbate difficulties with access in rural areas.
口腔健康状况不佳以及获得牙科护理的机会有限,已被公认为是医疗补助计划(Medicaid)覆盖儿童和低收入家庭儿童所面临的问题。然而,对于农村地区参加医疗补助计划的儿童获得牙科护理的情况却知之甚少。本研究考察了伊利诺伊州参加医疗补助计划或儿童健康保险计划的儿童在农村和城市县的牙科利用率差异。研究还考察了牙医总体供应量、牙医参与医疗补助计划的比例以及县级社会人口因素与医疗补助计划牙科利用率之间的关系。伊利诺伊州的县被划分为四个城市/农村类别。描述性分析表明,与大都市类别(35%和31%)相比,农村类别(25%和27%)的利用率较低。农村地区的牙医供应量大幅减少,因此参与医疗补助计划的牙医供应量也较低,尽管农村类别中牙医参与医疗补助计划的比例(45%和51%)大幅高于大都市类别(22%和32%)。然而,回归结果表明,在控制了几个牙科供应和人口因素后,参加医疗补助计划儿童的利用率与农村地区状况之间没有显著关系。无论城市或农村状况如何,与参加医疗补助计划儿童的牙科利用率相关的最重要因素是参加医疗补助计划的儿童比例以及参与的牙医与人口的比例。如果农村地区没有牙医的高参与率,参加医疗补助计划的农村儿童获得口腔医疗保健的机会将会更糟。政策制定者应专注于维持农村牙医的高参与率,并解决未来可能加剧农村地区获得医疗服务困难的供应问题。