Med
Care 1999 Jul;37(7):712-7
Racial and gender variation in use of diagnostic colonic procedures
in the Michigan Medicare population.
McMahon LF Jr, Wolfe RA, Huang S, Tedeschi P, Manning W Jr, Edlund MJ.
Department of Internal Medicine, the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
48109-0376, USA. lmcmahon@umich.edu
BACKGROUND: There is accumulating evidence that screening
programs can alter the natural history of colorectal cancer, a significant
cause of mortality and morbidity in the US. Understanding how the technology
to diagnose colonic diseases is utilized in the population provides insight
into both the access and processes of care.
METHOD: Using Medicare Part B billing files from the
state of Michigan from 1986 to 1989 we identified all procedures used
to diagnose colorectal disease. We utilized the Medicare Beneficiary File
and the Area Resource File to identify beneficiary-specific and community-sociodemographic
characteristics. The beneficiary and sociodemographic characteristics
were, then, used in multiple regression analyses to identify their association
with procedure utilization.
RESULTS: Sigmoidoscopic use declined dramatically with
the increasing age cohorts of Medicare beneficiaries. Urban areas and
communities with higher education levels had more sigmoidoscopic use.
Among procedures used to examine the entire colon, isolated barium enema
was used more frequently in African Americans, the elderly, and females.
The combination of barium enema and sigmoidoscopy was used more frequently
among females and the newest technology, colonoscopy, was used most frequently
among White males.
CONCLUSION: The existence of race, gender, and socioeconomic
disparities in the use of colorectal technologies in a group of patients
with near-universal insurance coverage demonstrates the necessity of understanding
the reason(s) for these observed differences to improve access to appropriate
technologies to all segments in our society.
PMID: 10424642 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]