Baldwin Laura-Mae, Hollow Walter B, Casey Susan, Hart L Gary, Larson Eric H, Moore Kelly, Lewis Ervin, Andrilla C Holly A, Grossman David C
Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington 98195-4982, USA.
J Rural Health. 2008 Summer;24(3):269-78. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-0361.2008.00168.x.
The Indian Health Service (IHS), whose per capita expenditure for American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) health services is about half that of the US civilian population, is the only source of health care funding for many rural AI/ANs. Specialty services, largely funded through contracts with outside practitioners, may be limited by low IHS funding levels.
To examine specialty service access among rural Indian populations in two states.
A 31-item mail survey addressing perceived access to specialty physicians, barriers to access, and access to non-physician clinical services was sent to 106 primary care providers in rural Indian health clinics in Montana and New Mexico (overall response rate 60.4%) and 95 primary care providers in rural non-Indian clinics within 25 miles of the Indian clinics (overall response rate 57.9%).
Substantial proportions of rural Indian clinic providers in both states reported fair or poor non-emergent specialty service access for their patients. Montana's rural Indian clinic providers reported poorer patient access to specialty care than rural non-Indian clinic providers, while New Mexico's rural Indian and non-Indian providers reported comparable access. Indian clinic providers in both states most frequently cited financial barriers to specialty care. Indian clinic providers reported better access to most non-physician services than non-Indian clinic providers.
Reported limitations in specialty care access for rural Indian clinic patients appear to be influenced by financial constraints. Health care systems factors may play a role in perceived differences in specialty access between rural Indian and non-Indian clinic patients.
美国印第安卫生服务局(IHS)为美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)提供的人均医疗服务支出约为美国平民人口的一半,是许多农村AI/AN人群唯一的医疗保健资金来源。专业服务主要通过与外部从业者签订合同获得资金,可能会受到IHS资金水平较低的限制。
研究两个州农村印第安人群获得专业服务的情况。
向蒙大拿州和新墨西哥州农村印第安健康诊所的106名初级保健提供者(总体回复率60.4%)以及印第安诊所25英里范围内农村非印第安诊所的95名初级保健提供者(总体回复率57.9%)发送了一份包含31个项目的邮件调查问卷,内容涉及对专科医生的可及性认知、获取障碍以及非医生临床服务的可及性。
两个州的农村印第安诊所提供者中,很大比例报告称其患者获得非紧急专科服务的情况为一般或较差。蒙大拿州农村印第安诊所提供者报告称其患者获得专科护理的情况比农村非印第安诊所提供者更差,而新墨西哥州农村印第安和非印第安提供者报告的可及性相当。两个州的印第安诊所提供者最常提到专科护理的经济障碍。印第安诊所提供者报告称,与非印第安诊所提供者相比,他们在获得大多数非医生服务方面情况更好。
农村印第安诊所患者在专科护理可及性方面报告的限制似乎受到经济制约的影响。医疗保健系统因素可能在农村印第安和非印第安诊所患者对专科服务可及性的认知差异中起作用。