Bozorgmehr Kayvan, Razum Oliver
Department of General Practice & Health Services Research, University Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Department of Epidemiology & International Public Health, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany.
PLoS One. 2015 Jul 22;10(7):e0131483. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0131483. eCollection 2015.
Access to health care for asylum-seekers and refugees (AS&R) in Germany is initially restricted before regular access is granted, allegedly leading to delayed care and increasing costs of care. We analyse the effects of (a) restricted access; and (b) two major policy reforms (1997, 2007) on incident health expenditures for AS&R in 1994-2013.
We used annual, nation-wide, aggregate data of the German Federal Statistics Office (1994-2013) to compare incident health expenditures among AS&R with restricted access (exposed) to AS&R with regular access (unexposed). We calculated incidence rate differences (∆IRt) and rate ratios (IRRt), as well as attributable fractions among the exposed (AFe) and the total population (AFp). The effects of between-group differences in need, and of policy reforms, on differences in per capita expenditures were assessed in (segmented) linear regression models. The exposed and unexposed groups comprised 4.16 and 1.53 million person-years. Per capita expenditures (1994-2013) were higher in the group with restricted access in absolute (∆IRt = 375.80 Euros [375.77; 375.89]) and relative terms (IRR = 1.39). The AFe was 28.07% and the AFp 22.21%. Between-group differences in mean age and in the type of accommodation were the main independent predictors of between-group expenditure differences. Need variables explained 50-75% of the variation in between-group differences over time. The 1997 policy reform significantly increased ∆IRt adjusted for secular trends and between-group differences in age (by 600.0 Euros [212.6; 986.2]) and sex (by 867.0 Euros [390.9; 1342.5]). The 2007 policy reform had no such effect.
The cost of excluding AS&R from health care appears ultimately higher than granting regular access to care. Excess expenditures attributable to the restriction were substantial and could not be completely explained by differences in need. An evidence-informed discourse on access to health care for AS&R in Germany is needed; it urgently requires high-quality, individual-level data.
在德国,寻求庇护者和难民(AS&R)在获得常规医疗服务之前,最初获得医疗保健的机会受到限制,据称这会导致医疗延迟并增加医疗成本。我们分析了(a)受限的医疗服务获取机会;以及(b)两项重大政策改革(1997年、2007年)对1994 - 2013年AS&R人群医疗支出的影响。
我们使用了德国联邦统计局1994 - 2013年的年度全国汇总数据,来比较受限医疗服务获取机会的AS&R人群(暴露组)和常规医疗服务获取机会的AS&R人群(非暴露组)之间的医疗支出情况。我们计算了发病率差异(∆IRt)和发病率比(IRRt),以及暴露组(AFe)和总人口(AFp)中的归因分数。在(分段)线性回归模型中评估了组间需求差异以及政策改革对人均支出差异的影响。暴露组和非暴露组分别包含416万和153万人年。在绝对(∆IRt = 375.80欧元[375.77;375.89])和相对(IRR = 1.39)方面,受限医疗服务获取机会组的人均支出(1994 - 2013年)更高。AFe为28.07%,AFp为22.21%。平均年龄和住宿类型的组间差异是组间支出差异的主要独立预测因素。需求变量解释了组间差异随时间变化的50 - 75%。1997年的政策改革显著增加了经长期趋势和年龄(增加600.0欧元[212.6;986.2])及性别(增加867.0欧元[390.9;1342.5])组间差异调整后的∆IRt。2007年的政策改革没有这种效果。
将AS&R人群排除在医疗保健之外的成本最终似乎高于给予其常规医疗服务获取机会的成本。因限制导致的额外支出相当可观,且不能完全由需求差异来解释。德国需要开展关于AS&R人群医疗服务获取的基于证据的讨论;这迫切需要高质量的个体层面数据。