Stein Ruth E K, Shenkman Elizabeth, Wegener Donna Hope, Silver Ellen Johnson
Albert Einstein College of Medicine/Children's Hospital at Montefiore, Bronx, New York 10467, USA.
Pediatrics. 2003 Aug;112(2):e112-8. doi: 10.1542/peds.112.2.e112.
Capitation rates for the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) funded under Title XXI of the Social Security Act were based on assumptions about the health care needs of children enrolled in this program. It has been suggested that parents are selective in enrolling children who are, in their opinion, most likely to need care, and that families who do not view their children as needing such care are more likely to ignore opportunities to seek or to maintain enrollment in SCHIP insurance. Thus, there have been concerns that enrollees might have more health conditions than a general population of children.
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that children in Title XXI have more ongoing health conditions than expected by comparing health status data from enrollees in 1 state SCHIP program to a nationally representative sample of children in the United States.
This study used statewide data obtained in a survey of Florida SCHIP program enrollees and national data obtained on a subset of the children who were assessed in the 1994 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). We examined health and demographic data collected by means of a structured telephone survey from parents for a random sample of 2432 children 2 to 18 years old who participated in the Florida Healthy Kids Program during the time period of October 1, 1997 through September 30, 1998. We compared these data to information on a national sample of all 26 845 children in the same age range whose health was assessed by the 1994 NHIS, and to a subset of the 6460 children in the NHIS sample whose family income met the eligibility criteria for SCHIP. To do this, we eliminated those children who were receiving Medicaid and those children whose household income levels were known to be above the eligibility level for SCHIP. We also excluded children whose household income was not reported. Thus, effectively this subsample contained non-Medicaid children, whose family incomes were below 185% of the federal poverty level. In Florida, a parent interview conducted by telephone included the Questionnaire for Identifying Children With Chronic Conditions (QuICCC), and their responses were used to determine if the child had any chronic health conditions. The QuICCC is a validated questionnaire containing 39-item sequences that ask about consequences of health conditions in children. It not only provides an overall classification of whether the child has a chronic condition, but also yields information about the consequences affecting the child within 3 condition-related domains: 1) functional limitations; 2) dependency on compensatory mechanisms or assistance; and 3) service need or use above and beyond routine care for age. The 1994 NHIS Core Interview and Disability Supplement contained a series of questions about children's functioning and service use that simulated the QuICCC, and we applied a previously published algorithm for determining the presence of a chronic condition using these items. Both data sets included comparable information on parental ratings of children's health status (excellent, very good, good, fair, poor), and on school absences, bed days, and restricted activity days in the previous 2 weeks.
Children in the Florida SCHIP program were more than twice as likely to have chronic health conditions than similarly aged children in the general population or children in the income restricted national subsample (31% vs 15.9% and 14.6%, respectively) and there also were more SCHIP children with school absences (29% vs 18% and 16.7%, respectively). In contrast, the rating of overall health of SCHIP children was not poorer according to their parents, and they did not have more activity restrictions. Children in Florida SCHIP who had conditions were more likely to experience related consequences within each of 3 domains, and they were nearly 3 times as likely to have all 3 types of consequences (7% in Florida SCHIP sample vs 2.8% and 1.7% in the full national sample and in the income-matched subsamome-matched subsample). However, the Florida SCHIP enrollees differed from the age and income-matched national sample in terms of the proportion of Hispanics. Thus, to verify these findings, we weighted the SCHIP sample to match the racial and ethnic proportions found in the national sample and repeated the analyses. The findings were robust, and there was no change in the percentage of children with special health care needs after such weighting.
Overall, the results of these analyses support the notion of adverse selection and retention in the SCHIP program. This is unlikely to be the result of aggressive marketing in enrollment sites that serve children with more medical problems, as Florida health care providers rank third as a source of information about the Title XXI program after family and friends and the schools. In addition, Florida has active outreach and single-page application process for Medicaid and an aggressive program to move children to Title V, which also should minimize the numbers of children with special health care needs enrolled in SCHIP. Nevertheless, these findings suggest that the children being enrolled in Florida's SCHIP program are not the largely healthy population that was envisioned. If replicated in other SCHIP programs, these findings raise questions about the basic underlying assumptions concerning the health of potential enrollees and could have implications for the long-term fiscal viability of the program.
根据《社会保障法》第二十一章资助的州儿童健康保险计划(SCHIP)的人均费用是基于对该计划中参保儿童医疗需求的假设。有人提出,父母在为他们认为最可能需要医疗护理的孩子参保时具有选择性,而那些不认为自己孩子需要此类护理的家庭更有可能忽视寻求或维持SCHIP保险参保资格的机会。因此,有人担心参保儿童可能比普通儿童群体有更多的健康问题。
本研究的目的是通过比较一个州SCHIP计划参保者的健康状况数据与美国具有全国代表性的儿童样本,来检验关于第二十一章中的儿童比预期有更多持续健康问题的假设。
本研究使用了在对佛罗里达州SCHIP计划参保者的调查中获得的全州数据,以及在1994年国家健康访谈调查(NHIS)中对一部分儿童进行评估所获得的全国数据。我们通过结构化电话调查,从1997年10月1日至1998年9月30日期间参加佛罗里达健康儿童计划的2432名2至18岁儿童的父母那里收集了健康和人口统计学数据。我们将这些数据与1994年NHIS评估的同一年龄段的所有26845名儿童的全国样本信息进行比较,并与NHIS样本中家庭收入符合SCHIP资格标准的6460名儿童的子集进行比较。为此,我们排除了那些正在接受医疗补助的儿童以及那些家庭收入水平已知高于SCHIP资格水平的儿童。我们还排除了家庭收入未报告的儿童。因此,实际上这个子样本包含非医疗补助儿童,其家庭收入低于联邦贫困线的185%。在佛罗里达州,通过电话进行的家长访谈包括慢性病儿童识别问卷(QuICCC),他们的回答被用来确定孩子是否有任何慢性健康问题。QuICCC是一份经过验证的问卷,包含39个项目序列,询问儿童健康状况的后果。它不仅提供了孩子是否患有慢性病的总体分类,还产生了关于在3个与病情相关领域中影响孩子的后果的信息:1)功能限制;2)对补偿机制或援助的依赖;3)超出常规年龄护理的服务需求或使用。1994年NHIS核心访谈和残疾补充问卷包含了一系列关于儿童功能和服务使用的问题,这些问题模拟了QuICCC,我们应用了先前发表的一种算法,使用这些项目来确定慢性病的存在。两个数据集都包括了关于父母对孩子健康状况(优秀、非常好、好、一般、差)的评分,以及前两周的学校缺勤、卧床天数和活动受限天数的可比信息。
佛罗里达州SCHIP计划中的儿童患有慢性健康问题的可能性是普通人群中同龄儿童或收入受限的全国子样本中儿童的两倍多(分别为31%、15.9%和14.6%),并且SCHIP计划中的儿童缺勤情况也更多(分别为29%、18%和16.7%)。相比之下,根据父母的评价,SCHIP计划中儿童的总体健康评分并不更低,并且他们没有更多的活动限制。佛罗里达州SCHIP计划中有健康问题的儿童在3个领域中的每一个领域都更有可能经历相关后果,并且他们出现所有3种后果类型的可能性几乎高出3倍(佛罗里达州SCHIP样本中为7%,而全国完整样本和收入匹配子样本中分别为2.8%和1.7%)。然而,佛罗里达州SCHIP计划的参保者在西班牙裔比例方面与年龄和收入匹配的全国样本不同。因此,为了验证这些发现,我们对SCHIP样本进行加权,使其与全国样本中的种族和民族比例相匹配,并重复了分析。结果是稳健的,加权后有特殊医疗需求的儿童百分比没有变化。
总体而言,这些分析结果支持了SCHIP计划中逆向选择和保留的观点。这不太可能是在为有更多医疗问题的儿童服务的参保地点积极营销的结果,因为在佛罗里达州,医疗保健提供者作为关于第二十一章计划的信息来源,排在家庭、朋友和学校之后,位列第三。此外,佛罗里达州针对医疗补助有积极的宣传推广和单页申请流程,以及一项将儿童转移到第五章的积极计划,这也应该尽量减少参加SCHIP计划的有特殊医疗需求的儿童数量。然而,这些发现表明,参加佛罗里达州SCHIP计划的儿童并非如预期的那样大多是健康人群。如果在其他SCHIP计划中得到验证,这些发现会对关于潜在参保者健康状况的基本假设提出疑问,并可能对该计划的长期财政可行性产生影响。