JAMA
1995 Aug 9;274(6):469-73.
Use of health services by African-American children with asthma on Medicaid.
Lozano P, Connell FA, Koepsell TD.
Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine,
Seattle, USA.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether African-American children
with asthma use more emergency department (ED) and inpatient medical services
and fewer preventive services than white children with similar insurance
coverage and family income.
DESIGN: Historical cohort study during Medicaid claims
data.
SETTING: Aid to Families With Dependent Children enrollees
aged 3 through 17 years in Seattle-Tacoma, Wash, metropolitan area.
PATIENTS: All 576 African-American children and 1369
white children receiving services for asthma between June 1988 and December
1992.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Utilization of asthma services
(ED, impatient, office visits, and pharmacy) and well-child services and
associated Medicaid reimbursements.
RESULTS: African-American children were more likely than
white children to make ED visits or to be hospitalized for asthma; adjusted
odds ratios (ORs) were 1.70 (95% confidence interval [Cl], 1.34 to 2.15)
and 1.42 (95% Cl, 1.03 to 1.96), respectively. African-American children
were less likely to have made an office visit for asthma; the adjusted
OR was 0.48 (95% Cl, 0.26 to 0.85). The two groups were similarly likely
to have filled a prescription for an asthma medication and to have made
a well-child visit. Per capita payments for asthma services were 24% higher
for African-American children: $436 vs $350 per child-year.
CONCLUSIONS: Higher use of ED and inpatient services
for asthma among African-American children using Medicaid (compared with
white children) cannot be fully explained by poverty or inadequate health
insurance. Furthermore, these children appear to make disproportionately
few office visits for asthma, suggesting suboptimal use of preventive
services for asthma. In contrast, the comparable use of well-child visits
in the two groups suggests the problem may not be in access to care in
general, but there may be specific problems in the successful management
of chronic diseases such as asthma among African-American children.
PMID: 7629955 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]