Dovey Susan, Weitzman Michael, Fryer George, Green Larry, Yawn Barbara, Lanier David, Phillips Robert
Robert Graham Center, Policy Studies in Family Practice and Primary Care, American Academy of Family Physicians, Washington, DC 20036, USA.
Pediatrics. 2003 May;111(5 Pt 1):1024-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.111.5.1024.
Medical care ecology has previously been investigated for adults, but no similar exploration has been made specifically for children.
To describe proportions of children receiving care in 6 types of health care setting on a monthly basis and to identify characteristics associated with receipt of care in these settings.
Nationally representative data from the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey were used to estimate the number of children per 1000 per month who received care at least once in each type of setting. Multivariate analyses assessed associations between receiving care in various settings and children's sociodemographic factors (age, sex, ethnicity, poverty, parent's education, urban or rural residence, insurance status, and whether or not the child had a usual source of care).
Of 1000 children aged 0 to 17 years, on average each month 167 visited a physician's office, 82 a dentist's office, 13 an emergency department, and 8 a hospital-based outpatient clinic. Three were hospitalized and 2 received professional health care in their home. Younger age was associated with increased proportions of children receiving care in all health care settings except dentists' clinics. Poverty, lack of health insurance, black race, and Hispanic ethnicity were associated with decreased receipt of care in physicians' and dentists' offices. Only age (<2 years and 13-17 years) and poverty status were associated with hospitalization (P <.05 for each). Rural residence was not associated with any significant variation in proportions of children receiving care in any setting. Having a usual source of care was associated with increased receipt of care in all settings except hospitals.
The ecology of children's medical care is similar to that of adults in the United States in that a substantial proportion of children receive health care each month, mostly in community-based, outpatient settings. In all settings except emergency departments, receipt of care varies significantly by children's age, race, ethnicity, income, health insurance status, and whether they have a usual source of care.
此前已对成人的医疗保健生态进行过研究,但尚未专门针对儿童进行类似的探索。
描述每月在6种医疗保健机构接受护理的儿童比例,并确定与在这些机构接受护理相关的特征。
使用1996年医疗支出小组调查的全国代表性数据来估计每月每1000名儿童中至少在每种机构接受一次护理的人数。多变量分析评估了在不同机构接受护理与儿童社会人口统计学因素(年龄、性别、种族、贫困状况、父母教育程度、城乡居住情况、保险状况以及儿童是否有固定的医疗服务来源)之间的关联。
在1000名0至17岁的儿童中,平均每月有167人就诊于医生办公室,82人就诊于牙医办公室,13人就诊于急诊科,8人就诊于医院门诊诊所。3人住院,2人在家中接受专业医疗护理。除牙医诊所外,在所有医疗保健机构接受护理的儿童比例中,年龄越小比例越高。贫困、缺乏医疗保险、黑人种族和西班牙裔与在医生办公室和牙医办公室接受护理的比例降低有关。只有年龄(<2岁和13 - 17岁)和贫困状况与住院有关(每项P <.05)。农村居住与在任何机构接受护理的儿童比例的任何显著差异均无关联。有固定的医疗服务来源与在除医院外的所有机构接受护理的比例增加有关。
美国儿童医疗保健生态与成人相似,即每月有相当比例的儿童接受医疗保健,大多是在社区门诊机构。除急诊科外,在所有机构中,儿童接受护理的情况因年龄、种族、民族、收入、医疗保险状况以及是否有固定的医疗服务来源而有显著差异。