Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Jul;27(7):780-6. doi: 10.1007/s11606-011-1983-3. Epub 2012 Jan 26.
Despite federal guidelines calling for the reduction of obesity and elimination of health disparities, black-white differences in obesity prevalence and in medical expenditures and utilization of health care services persist.
To examine black-white differences in medical expenditures and utilization of health care services (office-based visits, hospital outpatient visits, ER visits, inpatient stays and prescription medication) within body weight categories.
This study used data from the 2006 Medical Expenditures Panel Survey (MEPS) and included 15,164 non-Hispanic white and non-Hispanic black adults. We used a standard two-part econometric model to examine black-white differences in how expenditures (total annual medical expenditures and expenditures for each type of service) vary within body weight categories.
Blacks in each weight category were less likely to use any medical care than their white counterparts, even after controlling for socio-demographic characteristics, perceived health status, health conditions and health beliefs. Among those who received medical care, there is no significant difference in the total amount spent on care between blacks and whites. Compared to whites, blacks in each body weight category were significantly less likely to use office-based visits, hospital outpatient visits, and medications. Among those who used medications, blacks had significantly lower expenditures than whites. Blacks in obese class II/III were significantly less likely to have any medical expenditures on inpatient care than their white counterparts.
Black-white racial differences in total medical expenditures were observed in each body weight category and were significantly different in the obese I class, overweight, and healthy weight categories. Obese blacks also spent a smaller amount than obese whites--the insignificance might be due to the smaller sample size. These differences cannot be fully explained by socio-demographics, health conditions, or health beliefs. Black-white differences in medical expenditures may be largely due to relatively inexpensive types of care (office-based visits, outpatient care, medication) rather than more costly ones (inpatient care, ER).
尽管联邦指南呼吁减少肥胖和消除健康差距,但黑人和白人在肥胖患病率以及医疗支出和医疗保健服务利用方面仍存在差异。
检查肥胖类别内医疗支出和医疗保健服务(门诊就诊、医院门诊就诊、急诊就诊、住院和处方药)利用方面的黑人和白人之间的差异。
本研究使用了 2006 年医疗支出面板调查(MEPS)的数据,包括 15164 名非西班牙裔白人和非西班牙裔黑人成年人。我们使用标准的两部分计量经济学模型来检查肥胖类别内支出(总年度医疗支出和每种服务的支出)如何因黑人和白人而异。
在每个体重类别中,黑人比其白人同龄人更不可能使用任何医疗保健,即使在控制了社会人口特征、感知健康状况、健康状况和健康信念之后也是如此。在接受医疗保健的人群中,黑人和白人之间在医疗保健总支出方面没有显著差异。与白人相比,每个体重类别的黑人使用门诊就诊、医院门诊就诊和药物的可能性明显较低。在使用药物的人群中,黑人的支出明显低于白人。肥胖 II/III 类别的黑人与白人相比,在任何住院医疗支出方面的可能性明显较低。
在每个体重类别中都观察到了黑人和白人之间的总医疗支出的种族差异,在肥胖 I 类、超重和健康体重类别中差异显著。肥胖的黑人也比肥胖的白人花费更少——这种不显著可能是由于样本量较小。这些差异不能完全用社会人口统计学、健康状况或健康信念来解释。黑人和白人之间在医疗支出方面的差异可能主要归因于相对廉价的医疗保健类型(门诊就诊、门诊护理、药物),而不是更昂贵的医疗保健类型(住院治疗、急诊)。