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专科护理使用的相关因素。

Correlates of use of specialty care.

作者信息

Kuhlthau Karen, Nyman Rebecca M, Ferris Timothy G, Beal Anne C, Perrin James M

机构信息

Center for Child and Adolescent Health Policy, MassGeneral Hospital for Children, Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA.

出版信息

Pediatrics. 2004 Mar;113(3 Pt 1):e249-55. doi: 10.1542/peds.113.3.e249.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

This study examines patterns of specialist use among children and adolescents by presence of a chronic condition or disability, insurance, and sociodemographic characteristics.

DESIGN

Cross-sectional analysis of national survey data, describing rates of specialist use, with logistic regressions to examine associations with having a chronic condition or disability, insurance status, and sociodemographic variables.

SETTING

The 1999 National Health Interview Survey, a nationally representative household survey.

PARTICIPANTS

Children and adolescents 2 to 17 years old.

OUTCOME

Parental/respondent reports of specialist visits based on reports of the child having seen or talked to a medical doctor who specializes in a particular medical disease or problem about the child's health during the last 12 months.

RESULTS

Thirteen percent of US children were reported as seeing a specialist in the past year. Specialist-visit rates were twice as high for children with a chronic condition or disability (26% vs 10.2%). The specialist utilization rates for children without insurance were much lower than those for insured children, but among the children who have coverage (private, Medicaid, or other), specialist-utilization rates were similar (no statistically significant difference). Results of multivariate analyses predicting the use of specialists confirm the above-mentioned findings. Additionally, they show that use of specialist care was lower among children in the middle age group, minorities, children in families between 100% and 200% of the federal poverty level, and lower parental educational levels. We found no difference in specialist-visit rates between rural- and urban-dwelling children, by family status, or by gender. Differences in specialist use by gatekeeping status are found only among subgroups.

CONCLUSIONS

The results showed that, overall, 13% of children used a specialist in a year. Among the insured, a slightly greater percentage of children used such care (15%). These numbers were slightly lower than the 18% to 28% of pediatric patients referred per year in 5 US health plans, although the sources of data and definitions of specialist use differ. Our results showed that 26% of children with a chronic condition or disability who were insured by Medicaid use a specialist. Although the data are not directly comparable, this is within the range of previous findings showing annual rates by condition of use between 24% and 59%. These findings are consistent also with greater use of many different types of health care by children with special health care needs. Medicaid-utilization rates presented here were similar also to the rates found among privately insured children and children with "other" insurance. In our earlier work examining use of specialists by children insured by Medicaid, we speculated that Medicaid-insured children might face particular difficulty with access (eg, due to transportation or language barriers). The findings presented here suggest that children insured by Medicaid had no different use of specialists than other insured children. We do not know, however, whether similar rates are appropriate. As predicted, sociodemographic differences were pronounced and followed patterns typically found for use of health services. Lower rates of specialist use by non-Hispanic blacks and Hispanics remains even, controlling for chronic condition/disability, status, insurance, and socioeconomic status. This is an important issue that not only needs to be addressed in using specialist care but also in many areas in health care. It is the near poor who seem to have difficulty accessing care (as is evidenced by lower use of specialists). In a study of access to care, similar results were found, with those between 125% and 200% of the federal poverty level being less likely to have a usual source of care. This is roughly the population targeted by the State Children's Health Insurance Programs. These findings cannot determine whether rates of use are too high or too low. Additional work on outcomes for children who do and do not use specialist care would further inform the work presented here. Extending that work to examine patterns of care including but not limited to specialists and generalists would be even better.

摘要

目的

本研究通过慢性病或残疾状况、保险情况以及社会人口学特征,考察儿童和青少年专科医生的就诊模式。

设计

对全国调查数据进行横断面分析,描述专科医生就诊率,并通过逻辑回归分析来检验与患有慢性病或残疾、保险状况以及社会人口学变量之间的关联。

背景

1999年全国健康访谈调查,一项具有全国代表性的家庭调查。

参与者

2至17岁的儿童和青少年。

结果

根据家长/受访者报告,过去12个月内孩子看过或与专门诊治某种特定疾病或问题的医生就孩子健康问题进行过交流的情况。

结果

据报告,过去一年中13%的美国儿童看过专科医生。患有慢性病或残疾的儿童专科医生就诊率是其他儿童的两倍(26%对10.2%)。未参保儿童的专科医生利用率远低于参保儿童,但在参保儿童(私人保险、医疗补助或其他)中,专科医生利用率相似(无统计学显著差异)。预测专科医生使用情况的多变量分析结果证实了上述发现。此外,结果还显示中年组儿童、少数族裔儿童、家庭收入在联邦贫困线100%至200%之间的儿童以及父母教育水平较低的儿童,专科医生的使用较少。我们发现农村和城市儿童、不同家庭状况儿童以及不同性别的儿童之间专科医生就诊率没有差异。仅在亚组中发现守门人状态对专科医生使用情况有差异。

结论

结果表明,总体而言,13%的儿童一年中看过专科医生。在参保儿童中,使用此类医疗服务的儿童比例略高(15%)。这些数字略低于美国5个健康计划中每年转诊的儿科患者的18%至28%,尽管数据来源和专科医生使用的定义有所不同。我们的结果显示,26%有慢性病或残疾且参保医疗补助的儿童看过专科医生。尽管数据无法直接比较,但这在先前研究结果的范围内,先前研究显示按病情的年使用率在24%至59%之间。这些发现也与有特殊医疗需求的儿童更多地使用多种不同类型医疗服务的情况一致。这里呈现的医疗补助利用率也与私人参保儿童和“其他”保险儿童的利用率相似。在我们早期关于医疗补助参保儿童专科医生使用情况的研究中,我们推测医疗补助参保儿童可能在就医方面面临特殊困难(例如,由于交通或语言障碍)。这里呈现的研究结果表明,医疗补助参保儿童在专科医生使用方面与其他参保儿童没有差异。然而,我们不知道这些相似的使用率是否合适。正如所预测的,社会人口学差异很明显,并且遵循通常在医疗服务使用中发现的模式。即使在控制了慢性病/残疾、保险状况和社会经济地位后,非西班牙裔黑人和西班牙裔儿童的专科医生使用率仍然较低。这是一个重要问题,不仅在专科医疗服务使用中需要解决,在医疗保健的许多领域也需要解决。似乎是接近贫困水平的人群在获得医疗服务方面有困难(专科医生使用率较低就证明了这一点)。在一项关于医疗服务可及性的研究中也发现了类似结果,家庭收入在联邦贫困线125%至200%之间的人群获得常规医疗服务来源的可能性较小。这大致是儿童健康保险计划所针对的人群。这些发现无法确定使用率是过高还是过低。对使用和未使用专科医疗服务的儿童的结果进行更多研究将进一步为这里呈现的工作提供信息。将该研究扩展到考察包括但不限于专科医生和全科医生的医疗服务模式会更好。

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