J
Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci 1997 Nov;52(6):S325-35
Use of medical care by African American and White older persons: comparative
analysis of three national data sets.
Miller B, Campbell RT, Furner S, Kaufman JE, Li M, Muramatsu N, Prohaska
T.
Mandel School of Applied Social Science, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, OH 44106-7164, USA. bhm4@po.cwru.edu
Historically, there has been a large gap between African Americans and
Whites in access to health care, but this gap was ostensibly lessened
by the advent of Medicare and Medicaid for older adults in the mid 1960s.
The extent to which older African Americans continue to receive less access
to medical care as a result of economic inequalities, institutionalized
forms of discrimination, and life-style factors remains a subject of policy
debate. Empirical enquiry has produced inconsistent results. The purpose
of this study is to test the same set of models of medical use using identically
measured predictor variables in three nationally representative data sets
of older Americans: 1984 Study of Aging (SOA); 1984 National Long-Term
Care Survey (NLTC); and the 1987 National Medical Care Expenditure Survey
(NMES). Multivariate logistic regression of use of physician and hospital
services and Poisson regression of amount of service use identified inconsistent
results in race differences across data sets, but consistent results in
terms of the importance of health status and insurance as predictors of
use and amount of use. The findings suggest that health status and financial
resources may be more relevant areas for policy interventions than considerations
related to race and ethnicity.
PMID: 9403526 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]