J
Asthma 1999;36(2):195-204.
A comparison of asthma-related healthcare use between African-Americans
and Caucasians belonging to a health maintenance organization (HMO).
Blixen CE, Havstad S, Tilley BC, Zoratti E.
Department of Nursing Research P32, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH 44195,
USA. blixenc@cesmtp.ccf.org
The objective of this study was to determine whether racial differences
in patterns of asthma care persist in a healthcare environment when financial
barriers to health care are minimized. The study cohort consisted of African-American
(AA) and Caucasian (C) patients, 18-50 years old, enrolled in a large
HMO and hospitalized for asthma in 1993-1995. Baseline and 1-year follow-up
data were collected from the HMO computerized database. Of the 193 patients
in the cohort, 124 (65.3%) were AA and 67 (34.7%) were C. AAs were younger
(mean = 36.2, SD = 9.9) than Cs (mean = 39.4, SD = 9.1), had a lower median
household income, and made more asthma-related emergency department (ED)
visits (45.2%) than Cs (22.4%) during the 1 year after the initial hospitalization
(all p values <0.001). During the same time period, Cs made more asthma-related
primary care (70.2%) and allergy/pulmonary visits (38.8%) than AAs (47.6%
and 27%, respectively). Although there were no significant racial differences
in the rehospitalization rate, AA Medicaid contract patients (32%) had
more rehospitalizations for asthma than AA regular contract patients (15.8%).
These differential patterns in the use of asthma-related healthcare in
this study indicate that the provision of health insurance alone is not
sufficient to promote optimal levels of asthma management by all beneficiaries.
Asthma education programs targeted for low-income AA patients may improve
inappropriate healthcare use patterns.
PMID: 10227271 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]