Sills Marion R, Shetterly Susan, Xu Stanley, Magid David, Kempe Allison
Department of Pediatrics, University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 80218, USA.
Pediatrics. 2007 Apr;119(4):e829-36. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-2399.
The objective of this study was to determine the association between parental depression and pediatric health care use patterns.
We selected all children who were 0 to 17 years of age, enrolled in Kaiser Permanente of Colorado during the study period July 1997 to December 2002, and linked to at least 1 parent/subscriber who was enrolled for at least 6 months during that period. Unexposed children were selected from a pool of children whose parents did not have a depression diagnosis. Outcome measures were derived from the child's payment files and electronic medical charts and included 5 categories of use: well-child-care visits, sick visits to primary care departments, specialty clinic visits, emergency department visits, and inpatient visits. We compared the rate of use per enrollment month for these 5 categories between exposed and unexposed children within each of the 5 age strata.
Our study population had 24,391 exposed and 45,274 age-matched, unexposed children. For the outcome of well-child-care visits, teenagers showed decreased rates of visits among exposed children. The rate of specialty department visits was higher in exposed children in the 4 oldest age groups. The rates of both emergency department visits and sick visits to primary care departments were higher for exposed children across all 5 age categories. The rate of inpatient visits was higher among exposed children in 2 of the 5 age groups.
Overall, having at least 1 depressed parent is associated with greater rate of emergency department and sick visits across all age groups, greater use of inpatient and specialty services in some age groups, and a lower rate of well-child-care visits among 13- to 17-year-olds. This pattern of increased use of expensive resources and decreased use of preventive services represents one of the hidden costs of adult depression.
本研究的目的是确定父母抑郁与儿童医疗保健使用模式之间的关联。
我们选取了1997年7月至2002年12月研究期间在科罗拉多州凯撒医疗机构注册的所有0至17岁儿童,并将其与至少1名在此期间注册至少6个月的父母/订阅者相联系。未暴露组儿童从其父母没有抑郁症诊断的儿童群体中选取。结局指标来自儿童的支付文件和电子病历,包括5类使用情况:儿童健康保健就诊、初级保健部门的患病就诊、专科门诊就诊、急诊科就诊和住院就诊。我们比较了5个年龄层中暴露组和未暴露组儿童在这5类使用情况上每个注册月的使用率。
我们的研究人群中有24391名暴露组儿童和45274名年龄匹配的未暴露组儿童。对于儿童健康保健就诊这一结局,青少年中暴露组儿童的就诊率有所下降。在4个最大年龄组中,暴露组儿童的专科门诊就诊率较高。在所有5个年龄类别中,暴露组儿童的急诊科就诊率和初级保健部门的患病就诊率均较高。在5个年龄组中的2个组中,暴露组儿童的住院就诊率较高。
总体而言,至少有1名抑郁的父母与所有年龄组中更高的急诊科和患病就诊率、某些年龄组中更高的住院和专科服务使用率以及13至17岁儿童中更低的儿童健康保健就诊率相关。这种增加昂贵资源使用和减少预防服务使用的模式代表了成人抑郁症的隐性成本之一。