Freeman H E, Corey C R
University of California, Los Angeles.
Health Serv Res. 1993 Dec;28(5):531-41.
We examine the relationship between health insurance status and access to care among low-income persons 65 years of age and under, taking into account their social demographic characteristics and health care needs.
Study groups consist of the subsamples of persons with incomes between 100 and 150 percent of the federal poverty level and those below the federal poverty level interviewed in the 1983, 1984, and 1986 Health Interview Surveys (HIS) of the National Center for Health Statistics. Sample sizes range from about 6,000 to 11,000 depending on the proportion of each study group administered the insurance supplement.
Annual visits and whether hospitalized during a year are used as measures of access to medical care. The analysis consists of identifying predictors of use of services (i.e., health status and social characteristics) and, taking them into account, examining the relationship of insurance status to access to care. This was first undertaken on the 1983 survey; the models obtained then are replicated on the other two years of data.
DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: The HIS utilizes in-person interviews to gather health and medical history information from a stratified random sample of the U.S. population. Data were obtained through public use tapes distributed by the National Center for Health Statistics.
Results are consistent for all three years among persons in poverty. Being covered by Medicaid, in contrast to having private insurance or being without health insurance, is related to use of both ambulatory care and hospital care. The access differences for persons in poverty, regardless of their vulnerability or "risk" of requiring medical care, are marked and generally statistically significant. Among the near-poor the same findings occur, although the differences are less sharp and less often statistically significant.
The most obvious explanation is that the poor, and to a considerable extent the near-poor, have limited access because of copayments and deductibles that are typically part of private insurance coverage. The findings raise policy questions regarding the utility of either "play or pay" employer-provided insurance or income tax deductions to increase access.
我们研究65岁及以下低收入人群的健康保险状况与获得医疗服务机会之间的关系,同时考虑他们的社会人口特征和医疗需求。
研究组由收入在联邦贫困线100%至150%之间以及低于联邦贫困线的子样本组成,这些样本来自1983年、1984年和1986年国家卫生统计中心的健康访谈调查(HIS)。样本量约为6000至11000,具体取决于每个研究组接受保险补充调查的比例。
年度就诊次数和一年内是否住院被用作衡量获得医疗服务机会的指标。分析包括确定服务使用的预测因素(即健康状况和社会特征),并在此基础上研究保险状况与获得医疗服务机会之间的关系。这一分析首先在1983年的调查中进行;然后在另外两年的数据中复制所得模型。
数据收集/提取方法:HIS通过面对面访谈从美国人口分层随机样本中收集健康和病史信息。数据通过国家卫生统计中心分发的公开使用磁带获得。
贫困人群在这三年中的结果一致。与拥有私人保险或没有医疗保险相比,参加医疗补助计划与门诊和住院治疗的使用有关。贫困人群在获得医疗服务方面的差异显著,无论他们需要医疗护理的脆弱性或“风险”如何,且差异通常具有统计学意义。在接近贫困的人群中也出现了同样的结果,尽管差异不那么明显,且在统计学上具有显著性的情况也较少。
最明显的解释是,贫困人群以及在很大程度上接近贫困的人群,由于通常是私人保险覆盖一部分的自付费用和免赔额,获得医疗服务的机会有限。这些发现引发了关于“要么参保要么缴费”的雇主提供保险或所得税减免以增加医疗服务可及性的效用的政策问题。