J
Health Care Poor Underserved 1997 Feb;8(1):83-98.
Differences in follow-up visits between African American and white Medicaid
children hospitalized with asthma.
Ali S, Osberg JS.
Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Asthma-related hospitalizations and mortality have risen at alarming
rates in the past two decades, taking a disproportionate toll on African
American children. Adverse asthma outcomes have been attributed to inadequacies
in primary care, raising concerns about the quality of primary care delivered
to African American children. To assess differences in care between African
American and white children, the authors identified 500 children enrolled
in Massachusetts Medicaid and hospitalized for asthma, and reviewed their
medical claims data for the six-month period after hospitalization. It
was found that African American children had significantly fewer primary
care visits than their white counterparts, even after adjusting for potential
confounding variables. In contrast, emergency service utilization did
not differ by race. The authors conclude that racial disparity exists
in primary care access among children with asthma. Interventions should
be designed to target poor African American children who suffer disproportionately
from this life-threatening yet treatable disease.
PMID: 9019028 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]