Auger Katherine A, Kahn Robert S, Simmons Jeffrey M, Huang Bin, Shah Anita N, Timmons Kristen, Beck Andrew F
Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; Division of General and Community Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Acad Pediatr. 2017 Jan-Feb;17(1):79-87. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2016.07.003. Epub 2016 Jul 9.
Socioeconomic hardship is common among children hospitalized for asthma but often not practically measurable. Information on where a child resides is universally available. We sought to determine the correlation between neighborhood-level socioeconomic data and family-reported hardships.
Caregivers of 774 children hospitalized with asthma answered questions regarding income, financial strain, and primary care access. Addresses were geocoded and linked to zip code-, census tract-, and block group-level (neighborhood) data from the US Census. We then compared neighborhood median household income with family-reported household income; percentage of neighborhood residents living in poverty with family-reported financial strain; and percentage of neighborhood households without an available vehicle with family-reported access to primary care. We constructed heat maps and quantified correlations using Kendall rank correlation coefficient. Receiver operator characteristic curves were used to assess predictive abilities of neighborhood measures.
The cohort was 57% African American and 73% publicly-insured; 63% reported income <$30,000, 32% endorsed ≥4 financial strain measures, and 38% reported less than adequate primary care access. Neighborhood median household income was significantly and moderately correlated with and predictive of reported household income; neighborhood poverty was similarly related to financial strain; neighborhood vehicle availability was weakly correlated with and predictive of primary care access. Correlations and predictions provided by zip code measures were similar to those of census tract and block group.
Universally available neighborhood information might help efficiently identify children and families with socioeconomic hardships. Systematic screening with area-level socioeconomic measures has the potential to inform resource allocation more efficiently.
社会经济困难在因哮喘住院的儿童中很常见,但通常难以实际衡量。儿童居住地址的信息普遍可得。我们试图确定社区层面的社会经济数据与家庭报告的困难之间的相关性。
774名因哮喘住院儿童的照顾者回答了有关收入、经济压力和初级医疗服务可及性的问题。地址经地理编码后与来自美国人口普查的邮政编码、普查区和街区组层面(社区)的数据相链接。然后,我们将社区家庭收入中位数与家庭报告的家庭收入进行比较;将社区生活在贫困中的居民百分比与家庭报告的经济压力进行比较;将社区没有可用车辆的家庭百分比与家庭报告的初级医疗服务可及性进行比较。我们绘制了热图,并使用肯德尔等级相关系数对相关性进行量化。使用受试者工作特征曲线来评估社区指标的预测能力。
该队列中57%为非裔美国人,73%为公共保险;63%报告收入低于30,000美元,32%认可4项及以上经济压力指标,38%报告初级医疗服务可及性不足。社区家庭收入中位数与报告的家庭收入显著且中度相关,并具有预测性;社区贫困与经济压力的关系类似;社区车辆可用性与初级医疗服务可及性弱相关且具有预测性。邮政编码指标提供的相关性和预测与普查区和街区组的相似。
普遍可得的社区信息可能有助于有效识别有社会经济困难的儿童和家庭。采用地区层面的社会经济指标进行系统筛查有可能更有效地为资源分配提供信息。