Perrin James M, Kuhlthau Karen A, Gortmaker Steven L, Beal Anne C, Ferris Timothy G
Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy, MassGeneral Hospital for Children, Boston 02114, USA.
Ambul Pediatr. 2002 Nov-Dec;2(6):462-9. doi: 10.1367/1539-4409(2002)002<0462:gascfc>2.0.co;2.
To determine, among Medicaid-enrolled children with chronic conditions, associations of indicators of morbidity and expenditures with different patterns of generalist, subspecialist, and pediatric subspecialist use.
Cross-sectional analysis of Medicaid claims, enrollment, and provider data from 4 states (California, Georgia, Michigan, and Tennessee).
All children enrolled in Supplemental Security Income (aged 0-21 years) and a sample of other Medicaid-enrolled children matched for age and gender. We included 11 chronic conditions, including both uncommon conditions (eg, spina bifida, hemophilia) and common ones (eg, asthma, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder).
We determined the number of visits per year to generalists and subspecialists (pediatric and other), using only subspecialists relevant to that condition. We categorized patterns of care as generalist only, predominantly generalist, or predominantly subspecialist, and examined patterns by condition and an indicator of morbidity. Among children seeing subspecialists, we also compared morbidity by pediatric and other subspecialists. We used linear regression to determine per-year total expenditures, controlling for demographic characteristics and morbidity.
Most children (60.7%) saw generalists only. Twenty-eight percent were in predominantly generalist arrangements, and 11% were in predominantly subspecialist arrangements. Children in predominantly generalist arrangements had higher morbidity than children in generalist-only or predominantly subspecialist arrangements. Among children seeing subspecialists, those seeing pediatric subspecialists had generally higher morbidity than those seeing other subspecialists. Mean yearly expenditures varied from 1306 dollars (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) to 11,633 dollars (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). Children who saw only generalists had significantly lower expenditures for 6 of the 11 conditions, after adjusting for morbidity.
Medicaid-enrolled children in predominantly generalist arrangements appear to have more complicated conditions than children in generalist-only or predominantly subspecialist arrangements, engendering also higher expenditures. Although children who saw generalists only had lower expenditures than those seeing subspecialists, this finding may reflect unmeasured variations in morbidity.
在参加医疗补助计划的慢性病儿童中,确定发病率指标和支出与普通科医生、专科医生及儿科专科医生不同使用模式之间的关联。
对来自4个州(加利福尼亚州、佐治亚州、密歇根州和田纳西州)的医疗补助计划索赔、登记及医疗服务提供方数据进行横断面分析。
所有参加补充保障收入计划的儿童(0至21岁)以及按年龄和性别匹配的其他参加医疗补助计划儿童的样本。我们纳入了11种慢性病,包括罕见病(如脊柱裂、血友病)和常见疾病(如哮喘、注意力缺陷多动障碍)。
我们确定了每年看普通科医生和专科医生(儿科及其他专科)的就诊次数,仅计算与该疾病相关的专科医生。我们将护理模式分为仅看普通科医生、主要看普通科医生或主要看专科医生,并按疾病及发病率指标检查模式。在看专科医生的儿童中,我们还比较了看儿科专科医生和其他专科医生的发病率。我们使用线性回归确定每年的总支出,并控制人口统计学特征和发病率。
大多数儿童(60.7%)仅看普通科医生。28%的儿童主要看普通科医生,11%的儿童主要看专科医生。主要看普通科医生的儿童比仅看普通科医生或主要看专科医生的儿童发病率更高。在看专科医生的儿童中,看儿科专科医生的儿童通常比看其他专科医生的儿童发病率更高。年平均支出从1306美元(注意力缺陷多动障碍)到11633美元(获得性免疫缺陷综合征)不等。在调整发病率后,仅看普通科医生的儿童在11种疾病中的6种疾病上支出显著更低。
主要看普通科医生的参加医疗补助计划儿童似乎比仅看普通科医生或主要看专科医生的儿童病情更复杂,费用也更高。虽然仅看普通科医生的儿童支出低于看专科医生的儿童,但这一发现可能反映了发病率方面未测量的差异。