Chen Alex Y, Newacheck Paul W
Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90027, USA.
Ambul Pediatr. 2006 Jul-Aug;6(4):204-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ambp.2006.04.009.
To examine the role of insurance coverage in protecting families of children with special health care needs (CSHCN) from the financial burden associated with care.
Data from the 2001 National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs were analyzed. We built 2 multivariate regression models by using "work loss/cut back" and "experiencing financial problems" as the dependent variables, and insurance status as the primary independent variable of interest while adjusting for income, race/ethnicity, functional limitation/severity, and other sociodemographic predictors.
Approximately 29.9% of CSHCN live in families where their condition led parents to report cutting back on work or stopping work completely. Families of 20.9% of CSHCN reported experiencing financial difficulties due to the child's condition. Insurance coverage significantly reduced the likelihood of financial problems for families at every income level. The proportion of families experiencing financial problems was reduced from 35.7% to 23.0% for the poor and 44.9% to 24.5% for low-income families with continuous insurance coverage (P < .01 for both comparisons). Similarly, the proportion of parents having to cut back or stop work was reduced from 42.8% to 35.9% for the poor (P < .05) and 43.5% to 33.9% for low-income families (P < .01).
Continuous health insurance coverage provides protection from financial burden and hardship for families of CSHCN in all income groups. This evidence is supportive of policies designed to promote universal coverage for CSHCN. However, many poor and low-income families continue to experience work loss and financial problems despite insurance coverage. Hence, health insurance should not be viewed as a solution in itself, but instead as one element of a comprehensive strategy to provide financial safety for families with CSHCN.
探讨保险覆盖在保护有特殊医疗需求儿童(CSHCN)家庭免受与医疗相关的经济负担方面的作用。
对2001年全国有特殊医疗需求儿童调查的数据进行分析。我们构建了两个多元回归模型,以“工作损失/减少工作时间”和“经历财务问题”作为因变量,保险状况作为主要的感兴趣自变量,同时对收入、种族/族裔、功能限制/严重程度以及其他社会人口学预测因素进行调整。
约29.9%的CSHCN生活在其病情导致父母报告减少工作或完全停止工作的家庭中。20.9%的CSHCN家庭报告因孩子的病情而经历财务困难。保险覆盖显著降低了各收入水平家庭出现财务问题的可能性。对于贫困家庭,经历财务问题的家庭比例从35.7%降至23.0%,对于有连续保险覆盖的低收入家庭,这一比例从44.9%降至24.5%(两项比较P均<.01)。同样,贫困家庭中不得不减少或停止工作的父母比例从42.8%降至35.9%(P<.05),低收入家庭从43.5%降至33.9%(P<.01)。
持续的医疗保险覆盖为所有收入群体的CSHCN家庭提供了免受经济负担和困难的保护。这一证据支持旨在促进CSHCN普遍覆盖的政策。然而,许多贫困和低收入家庭尽管有保险覆盖,仍继续经历工作损失和财务问题。因此,医疗保险本身不应被视为解决方案,而应被视为为CSHCN家庭提供财务安全的综合战略的一个要素。