McBean A Marshall
School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, USA.
Medicare Brief. 2006 Oct(15):1-7.
Medicare's databases provide a rich source of information about the program's 43 million beneficiaries. These data have played an important role in documenting racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in health and health care. Because they derive largely from administrative records that have been collected over many years using varying standards, however, they are not fully adequate for monitoring and reducing disparities. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has supported a number of initiatives to improve the quality of its data on race and ethnicity. Yet analyses of 2002 Medicare administrative data show that only 52 percent of Asian beneficiaries and 33 percent of both Hispanic and American Indian/Alaska Native beneficiaries were identified correctly. As CMS moves to reduce disparities, and as researchers strive to explain how and why disparities occur, further improvements in Medicare's data are essential. Health care organizations also need data on the race and ethnicity of the people they serve in order to improve the quality of care for minorities. This brief provides some recommendations for further efforts.
医疗保险数据库为该项目的4300万受益人提供了丰富的信息来源。这些数据在记录健康和医疗保健方面的种族、民族及社会经济差异方面发挥了重要作用。然而,由于这些数据主要源自多年来按照不同标准收集的行政记录,因此并不完全适用于监测和减少差异。医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)已支持多项举措来提高其种族和民族数据的质量。然而,对2002年医疗保险行政数据的分析表明,只有52%的亚裔受益人以及33%的西班牙裔和美国印第安/阿拉斯加原住民受益人被正确识别。随着CMS着手减少差异,以及研究人员努力解释差异产生的方式和原因,医疗保险数据的进一步改进至关重要。医疗保健机构也需要有关其所服务人群的种族和民族的数据,以提高对少数群体的护理质量。本简报为进一步的努力提供了一些建议。