University of Minnesota School of Social Work, Saint Paul.
University of Minnesota School of Public Health, Minneapolis, MN.
Med Care. 2023 Sep 1;61(9):595-600. doi: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000001888. Epub 2023 Aug 10.
The objective of this study was to examine health care unaffordability for rural and urban residents and by postpartum status.
We used cross-sectional survey data on female-identifying respondents ages 18-44 (n=17,800) from the 2019 to 2021 National Health Interview Study. Outcomes of interest were 3 measures of health care unaffordability. We conducted bivariate and multivariable regression models to assess the association between health care unaffordability, rurality, and postpartum status.
Bivariate analyses showed postpartum people reported statistically significantly higher rates of being unable to pay medical bills and having problems medical paying bills, as compared with nonpostpartum people. Rural residents also reported statistically significantly higher rates of being unable to pay their medical bills and having problems paying medical bills as compared with urban residents. In adjusted models, the predicted probability of being unable to pay medical bills among postpartum respondents was 12.8% (CI, 10.1-15.5), which was statistically significantly higher than among nonpostpartum respondents. Similarly, postpartum respondents had statistically significantly higher predicted probabilities of reporting problems paying medical bills (18.4%, CI, 15.4-21.4) as compared with nonpostpartum respondents. The rural residency was not significantly associated with the health care unaffordability outcome measures in adjusted models.
Both postpartum and rural respondents reported higher rates of being unable to pay medical bills and having problems paying medical bills; however, after adjusting for covariates, only postpartum respondents reported statistically significantly higher rates of these outcomes. These results suggest that postpartum status may present challenges to health care affordability that span the urban/rural context.
本研究旨在考察农村和城市居民以及产后人群的医疗负担能力。
我们使用了 2019 年至 2021 年全国健康访谈研究中 18-44 岁女性受访者的横断面调查数据(n=17800)。感兴趣的结果是 3 种医疗负担能力的衡量指标。我们进行了单变量和多变量回归模型,以评估医疗负担能力、农村和产后状况之间的关联。
单变量分析显示,与非产后人群相比,产后人群报告无法支付医疗费用和支付医疗费用有困难的比例统计学上显著更高。与城市居民相比,农村居民报告无法支付医疗费用和支付医疗费用有困难的比例也统计学上显著更高。在调整后的模型中,产后受访者无法支付医疗费用的预测概率为 12.8%(CI,10.1-15.5),与非产后受访者相比,这一比例统计学上显著更高。同样,与非产后受访者相比,产后受访者报告支付医疗费用有困难的预测概率也统计学上显著更高(18.4%,CI,15.4-21.4)。在调整后的模型中,农村居住状态与医疗负担能力的衡量指标之间没有显著关联。
产后和农村受访者都报告了更高的无法支付医疗费用和支付医疗费用有困难的比例;然而,在调整了协变量后,只有产后受访者报告了这些结果的统计学显著更高的比例。这些结果表明,产后状况可能会对城乡背景下的医疗负担能力带来挑战。