Carlson Matthew J, Blustein Jan
Portland State University, CareOregon, USA.
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2003 Aug;14(3):372-85. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2010.0635.
This cross-sectional study compares self-reported access to care among a representative sample of 13,952 HMO enrollees in New Jersey. Using multivariate logistic regression, this study found that compared with college graduates, those with less than a high school education reported more difficulty obtaining tests or treatment. Compared with whites, Hispanics were more likely to report difficulty seeing their primary care provider, and African Americans reported greater difficulty seeing a specialist and obtaining tests and treatment. Enrollees in poor health were more likely to report problems seeing a specialist and obtaining tests and treatment than enrollees in excellent health. Income was not a consistent predictor of access. Nonfinancial barriers appear to be more influential than financial barriers for predicting access problems in commercial HMOs. More work is needed to identify the source of nonfinancial barriers to care among vulnerable populations.
这项横断面研究比较了新泽西州13952名健康维护组织(HMO)参保者的代表性样本中自我报告的医疗服务可及性情况。通过多变量逻辑回归分析,该研究发现,与大学毕业生相比,高中以下学历者表示在获得检查或治疗方面困难更多。与白人相比,西班牙裔更有可能报告看初级保健医生有困难,而非裔美国人则表示看专科医生以及获得检查和治疗的困难更大。健康状况不佳的参保者比健康状况极佳的参保者更有可能报告看专科医生以及获得检查和治疗存在问题。收入并非医疗服务可及性的一致预测因素。在商业性健康维护组织中,非财务障碍似乎比财务障碍对预测医疗服务可及性问题的影响更大。需要开展更多工作来确定弱势群体医疗服务非财务障碍的根源。