Green Carla A, Polen Michael R, Perrin Nancy A, Leo Michael, Lynch Frances L, Rush Dan P
Oregon Health & Science University & Affiliate Investigator Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research, Portland, OR 97227-1110, USA.
J Ment Health Policy Econ. 2004 Sep;7(3):107-25.
Most models of health services use or costs include gender as a covariate, combining data for men and women in analyses. This strategy may obscure differences in underlying processes producing differential health care use by men and women, particularly in examinations of factors that affect health care use and differ by gender (e.g. alcohol consumption and depression).
To examine gender differences in the relationships between alcohol consumption, physical and mental health and functioning, and costs of health care.
The setting was Kaiser Permanente Northwest, a large non-profit group practice model HMO serving northwest Oregon and southwest Washington in the northwest United States. Primary (survey) and secondary (health plan records of service use; diagnoses from medical chart review) data were collected for random samples of health plan members in the period 1989-1993 (n = 5,669). Health plan administrative records of service use were used to estimate health care costs. Gender-specific latent structure models predicting health care costs were created using self-reported mental health, physical health, functioning, alcohol consumption, and prior-year health plan record-based diagnoses of depression and alcohol problems.
Alcohol consumption and prior alcohol problems were directly related to health care costs, although in opposite directions, for both men and women. Alcohol consumption was negatively associated with costs, while prior alcohol problems predicted higher costs. Gender differences existed in the relationship between physical health and health care costs indirectly via drinking status. Prior depression had direct effects on increased health care costs, and this relationship was stronger for men than for women. The roles played by mental health symptoms were similar for men and women. Better mental health at the time of the survey was associated with reduced alcohol consumption or likelihood of consuming alcohol, but had no direct effects on later costs. Indirect effects of mental health were found via alcohol consumption.
Gender plays an important role in the factors underlying total costs of health care, and gender differences in these relationships appear more common among those who consume alcohol. For both genders, alcohol use predicts lower health care costs in this light-to-moderate drinking population, although prior diagnoses of alcohol problems predict higher costs. The direct relationship between depression diagnosis and higher health care costs is stronger among men.
大多数卫生服务使用或成本模型将性别作为协变量,在分析中合并男性和女性的数据。这种策略可能会掩盖导致男性和女性医疗保健使用差异的潜在过程中的差异,特别是在研究影响医疗保健使用且因性别而异的因素(如饮酒和抑郁症)时。
研究饮酒、身心健康与功能以及医疗保健成本之间关系中的性别差异。
研究背景为凯撒永久医疗集团西北分部,这是一家大型非营利性团体执业模式的健康维护组织,服务于美国西北部的俄勒冈州西北部和华盛顿州西南部。在1989 - 1993年期间,从健康计划成员的随机样本中收集了主要(调查)数据和次要(服务使用的健康计划记录;通过病历审查得出的诊断)数据(n = 5669)。使用健康计划服务使用的行政记录来估算医疗保健成本。利用自我报告的心理健康、身体健康、功能、饮酒情况以及上一年基于健康计划记录的抑郁症和酒精问题诊断,创建了预测医疗保健成本的特定性别潜在结构模型。
饮酒和既往酒精问题与男性和女性的医疗保健成本均直接相关,尽管方向相反。饮酒与成本呈负相关,而既往酒精问题预示着更高的成本。身体健康与医疗保健成本之间通过饮酒状态存在间接的性别差异。既往抑郁症对医疗保健成本增加有直接影响,且这种关系在男性中比在女性中更强。心理健康症状对男性和女性的作用相似。调查时更好的心理健康与饮酒量减少或饮酒可能性降低相关,但对后期成本没有直接影响。通过饮酒发现了心理健康的间接影响。
性别在医疗保健总成本的潜在因素中起着重要作用,并且这些关系中的性别差异在饮酒者中似乎更为常见。对于两性而言,在这个轻度至中度饮酒人群中,饮酒预示着较低的医疗保健成本,尽管既往酒精问题诊断预示着更高的成本。抑郁症诊断与更高医疗保健成本之间的直接关系在男性中更强。