Diabetes
Care 1998 Jul;21(7):1090-5
Diabetes in the African-American Medicare population. Morbidity, quality
of care, and resource utilization.
Chin MH, Zhang JX, Merrell K.
Section of General Internal Medicine, University of Chicago, Illinois
60637, USA.
mchin@medicine.bsd.uchicago.edu
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether African-American Medicare
recipients with diabetes are at increased risk for morbidity, poor quality
of care, and high resource utilization.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We analyzed 1,376 patients
with diabetes who were > or = 65 years of age and in the 1993 Medicare
Current Beneficiary Survey. Morbidity measures were the Katz Index of
Activities of Daily Living, Instrumental Activities of Daily Living, overall
health perception, Charlson Comorbidity Index score, and diabetic complications.
Quality of care standards were glycosylated hemoglobin measurements, ophthalmological
visits, lipid testing, mammography, influenza vaccination, readmission
within 30 days of hospital discharge, and outpatient visits within 4 weeks
of hospital discharge. We stratified Medicare reimbursement by type of
service and adjusted for sex, education, and age in multivariable analyses.
RESULTS: Compared with white patients, African-American
patients had worse health perception and lower quality of care. They were
more likely to visit the emergency department and had fewer physician
visits per year. African-Americans had higher reimbursement for home health
services, but total reimbursement was similar after case-mix adjustment.
CONCLUSIONS: Improved access to preventive care for older
African-Americans with diabetes may improve health perception and use
of the emergency department. The potential effect on total reimbursement
is unclear. Future policy interventions to improve quality of care among
Medicare patients with diabetes should especially target African-Americans.
PMID: 9653601 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]