Division of Hospital Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Department of Pediatrics, Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Sep 1;4(9):e2126083. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.26083.
Health care in the US is often expensive for families; however, there is little transparency in the cost of medical services. The extent to which parents want cost transparency in their children's care is not well characterized.
To explore the preferences and experiences of parents of hospitalized children regarding the discussion and consideration of health care costs in the inpatient care of their children.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional multicenter survey study included 6 geographically diverse university-affiliated US children's hospitals from November 3, 2017, to November 8, 2018. Participants included a convenience sample of English- and Spanish-speaking parents of hospitalized children nearing hospital discharge. Data were analyzed from January 1, 2020, to June 25, 2021.
Parents' preferences and experiences regarding transparency of their child's health care costs. Multivariable linear regression examined associations between clinical and sociodemographic variables with parents' preferences for knowing, discussing, and considering costs in the clinical setting. Factors included family financial difficulties, child's level of chronic disease, insurance payer, deductible, family poverty level, race, ethnicity, parental educational level, and study site.
Of 644 invited participants, 526 (82%) were enrolled (290 [55%] male), of whom 362 (69%) were White individuals, 400 (76%) were non-Hispanic/Latino individuals, and 274 (52%) had children with private insurance. Overall, 397 families (75%) wanted to discuss their child's medical costs, but only 36 (7%) reported having a cost conversation. If cost discussions were to occur, 294 families (56%) would prefer to speak to a financial counselor. Ninety-eight families (19%) worried discussing costs would hurt the quality of their child's care. Families with a medical financial burden unrelated to their hospitalized child had higher mean agreement that their child's physician should consider the family's costs in medical decision-making than families without a medical financial burden (effect size, 0.55 [95% CI, 0.18-0.92]). No variables were consistently associated with cost transparency preferences.
Most parents want to discuss their child's costs during an acute hospitalization. Discussions of health care costs may be an important, relatively unexplored component of family-centered care. However, these discussions rarely occur, indicating a tremendous opportunity to engage and support families in this issue.
美国的医疗保健对家庭来说通常很昂贵;然而,医疗服务的成本却缺乏透明度。父母希望在孩子的护理中了解成本透明度的程度还没有很好地描述。
探讨住院儿童的父母在讨论和考虑其子女住院治疗的医疗费用方面的偏好和经验。
设计、地点和参与者:这项横断面多中心调查研究包括 2017 年 11 月 3 日至 2018 年 11 月 8 日来自 6 家地理位置不同的美国大学附属儿童医院的便利样本。参与者包括即将出院的住院儿童的英语和西班牙语父母。数据于 2020 年 1 月 1 日至 2021 年 6 月 25 日进行分析。
父母对其子女医疗费用透明度的偏好和经验。多变量线性回归分析了临床和社会人口统计学变量与父母在临床环境中了解、讨论和考虑成本的偏好之间的关联。因素包括家庭经济困难、孩子慢性病的程度、保险支付人、免赔额、家庭贫困水平、种族、族裔、父母教育水平和研究地点。
在 644 名受邀参与者中,有 526 名(82%)参加了研究(290 名[55%]为男性),其中 362 名(69%)为白人,400 名(76%)为非西班牙裔/拉丁裔,274 名(52%)有私人保险。总体而言,397 个家庭(75%)希望讨论他们孩子的医疗费用,但只有 36 个家庭(7%)报告进行了费用讨论。如果要进行成本讨论,294 个家庭(56%)希望与财务顾问交谈。98 个家庭(19%)担心讨论费用会影响孩子的护理质量。与住院儿童无关的医疗财务负担的家庭比没有医疗财务负担的家庭更同意他们孩子的医生在医疗决策中应考虑家庭的费用(效应量,0.55[95%CI,0.18-0.92])。没有变量始终与成本透明度偏好相关。
大多数父母希望在孩子急性住院期间讨论他们的费用。医疗保健费用的讨论可能是家庭为中心护理的一个重要但尚未得到充分探索的组成部分。然而,这些讨论很少发生,这表明有巨大的机会让家庭参与并支持这一问题。