Flores G, Vega L R
Division of General Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center, USA.
Fam Med. 1998 Mar;30(3):196-205.
More than 9 million Latino children currently live in the United States. Latinos will soon be the largest minority group in the country, but little is known about access barriers to health care faced by Latino children. We reviewed the literature to define specific barriers to care for Latino children, identify methodologic problems, and highlight the clinical and research implications of the identified barriers.
We did a MEDLINE search, using combinations of the key words Hispanic, children, and access. Study exclusion criteria included "not an original research article," "enrolled only adult subjects," "no separate data analysis for children," and "dental care focus."
The search yielded 497 citations, of which 27 met the inclusion criteria. Of the 32 potential barriers identified, 21 had good supportive evidence. Lack of health insurance was a consistent barrier; recent data revealed that 26% of Latino children are uninsured, compared with 10% of white children and 14% of African-American children. Latino children also are at greater risk for episodic insurance coverage, low rates of private insurance, and loss of employee-based coverage. Parent beliefs about the etiology and treatment of their child's illness, use of home remedies, choice of sources of advice, and folk medicine practices may also influence how health care is obtained. Few data are available on differences in access among major Latino subpopulations, and no studies focused primarily on barriers as perceived by Latino parents. Evidence is equivocal or lacking that the following are barriers for Latino children: immigration status, duration of parent residency in the United States, and acculturation. Several barriers were identified that originate with practices and behaviors of health care providers, including reduced screening, missed vaccination opportunities, decreased likelihood of receiving prescriptions, and poor communication.
Lack of health insurance and lack of a regular source of care are major access barriers for Latino children, but many other barriers were identified that also can have a substantial effect on health care. In addition, the behaviors and practices of both health care providers and parents can affect access to care. Too little is known about what parents perceive to be the major barriers, access differences among Latino subpopulations, the roles of language and culture, and the causes of obstacles resulting from the actions of providers.
目前有超过900万拉丁裔儿童生活在美国。拉丁裔很快将成为该国最大的少数族裔群体,但对于拉丁裔儿童在获得医疗保健方面所面临的障碍却知之甚少。我们回顾了相关文献,以确定拉丁裔儿童获得医疗保健的具体障碍,识别方法学问题,并强调已识别障碍的临床和研究意义。
我们使用关键词西班牙裔、儿童和获得医疗保健等组合在MEDLINE数据库中进行检索。研究排除标准包括“非原创研究文章”、“仅纳入成年受试者”、“未对儿童进行单独数据分析”以及“专注于牙科保健”。
检索共得到497条引文,其中27条符合纳入标准。在已识别的32个潜在障碍中,21个有充分的支持证据。缺乏医疗保险是一个持续存在的障碍;最近的数据显示,26%的拉丁裔儿童未参保,相比之下,白人儿童的这一比例为10%,非裔美国儿童为14%。拉丁裔儿童还更有可能面临间歇性保险覆盖、私人保险费率低以及基于雇主的保险丧失等问题。父母对孩子疾病病因和治疗的看法、使用家庭疗法、选择咨询来源以及民间医学做法也可能影响医疗保健的获取方式。关于主要拉丁裔亚群体在获得医疗保健方面的差异,几乎没有可用数据,也没有主要关注拉丁裔父母所感知障碍的研究。关于以下因素是否为拉丁裔儿童的障碍,证据不明确或缺乏:移民身份、父母在美国的居住时间以及文化适应情况。还识别出了一些源于医疗保健提供者的做法和行为的障碍,包括筛查减少、错过疫苗接种机会、开具处方的可能性降低以及沟通不畅。
缺乏医疗保险和缺乏固定的医疗保健来源是拉丁裔儿童获得医疗保健的主要障碍,但还识别出了许多其他也会对医疗保健产生重大影响的障碍。此外,医疗保健提供者和父母的行为及做法都会影响获得医疗保健的机会。对于父母认为的主要障碍、拉丁裔亚群体之间获得医疗保健的差异、语言和文化的作用以及提供者行为导致障碍的原因,我们了解得太少。