Department of Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, California.
Department of Social Welfare, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, Los Angeles, California.
Pediatrics. 2023 Mar 1;151(3). doi: 10.1542/peds.2021-054970.
Poverty is a common root cause of poor health and disrupts medical care. Clinically embedded antipoverty programs that address financial stressors may prevent missed visits and improve show rates. This pilot study evaluated the impact of clinic-based financial coaching on adherence to recommended preventive care pediatric visits and vaccinations in the first 6 months of life.
In this community-partnered randomized controlled trial comparing clinic-based financial coaching to usual care among low-income parent-infant dyads attending pediatric preventive care visits, we examined the impact of the longitudinal financial intervention delivered by trained coaches addressing parent-identified, strengths-based financial goals (employment, savings, public benefits enrollment, etc.). We also examined social needs screening and resource referral on rates of missed preventive care pediatric visits and vaccinations through the 6-month well-child visit.
Eighty-one parent-infant dyads were randomized (35 intervention, 46 control); nearly all parents were mothers and more than one-half were Latina. The rate of missed visits among those randomized to clinic-based financial coaching was half that of controls (0.46 vs 1.07 missed of 4 recommended visits; mean difference, 0.61 visits missed; P = .01). Intervention participants were more likely to have up-to-date immunizations each visit (relative risk, 1.26; P = .01) with fewer missed vaccinations by the end of the 6-month preventive care visit period (2.52 vs 3.8 missed vaccinations; P = .002).
In this pilot randomized trial, a medical-financial partnership embedding financial coaching within pediatric primary care improved low-income families' adherence to recommended visits and vaccinations. Clinic-based financial coaching may improve care continuity and quality in the medical home.
贫困是健康状况不佳的常见根源,并扰乱医疗服务。临床嵌入的扶贫计划,解决经济压力源,可能防止错过就诊和提高就诊率。本试点研究评估了基于诊所的财务辅导对推荐的预防保健儿科就诊和生命最初 6 个月疫苗接种的坚持情况的影响。
在这项社区合作的随机对照试验中,比较了参加儿科预防保健就诊的低收入父母-婴儿对的基于诊所的财务辅导与常规护理,我们研究了由经过培训的辅导员提供的纵向财务干预对父母确定的基于优势的财务目标(就业、储蓄、公共福利登记等)的影响。我们还检查了社会需求筛查和资源转介对错过预防保健儿科就诊和疫苗接种的影响,通过 6 个月的健康儿童就诊进行评估。
81 对父母-婴儿被随机分配(35 例干预,46 例对照);几乎所有的父母都是母亲,超过一半是拉丁裔。接受基于诊所的财务辅导的随机分组的就诊错过率是对照组的一半(0.46 次错过 4 次推荐就诊中的 1.07 次;平均差异,0.61 次错过就诊;P =.01)。干预组在每次就诊时更有可能及时接种疫苗(相对风险,1.26;P =.01),并且在 6 个月的预防保健就诊期间错过的疫苗接种次数更少(2.52 次比 3.8 次错过疫苗接种;P =.002)。
在这项试点随机试验中,将财务辅导嵌入儿科初级保健中的医疗-财务伙伴关系改善了低收入家庭对推荐就诊和疫苗接种的坚持情况。基于诊所的财务辅导可以提高医疗保健服务的连续性和质量。