School-Based Healthcare and Absenteeism: Evidence from Telemedicine

IF 1.7 3区 教育学 Q2 ECONOMICS
Sarah Komisarow, Steven W. Hemelt
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The prevalence of school-based healthcare has increased markedly over the past decade. We study a modern mode of school-based healthcare, telemedicine, that offers the potential to reach places and populations with historically low access to such care. School-based telemedicine clinics (SBTCs) provide students with access to healthcare during the regular school day through private videoconferencing with a healthcare provider. We exploit variation over time in SBTC openings across schools in three rural districts in North Carolina. We find that school-level SBTC access reduces the likelihood that a student is chronically absent by 2.5 percentage points (29 percent) and reduces the number of days absent by about 0.8 days (10 percent). Relatedly, access to an SBTC increases the likelihood of math and reading test-taking by between 1.8-2.0 percentage points (about 2 percent). Heterogeneity analyses suggest that these effects are driven by male students. Finally, we see suggestive evidence that SBTC access reduces violent or weapons-related disciplinary infractions among students but has little influence on other forms of misbehavior.
基于学校的医疗保健和缺勤:来自远程医疗的证据
在过去十年中,以学校为基础的医疗保健的普及程度显著提高。我们研究了一种以学校为基础的现代医疗模式,即远程医疗,它为历史上很少获得此类医疗服务的地区和人群提供了潜力。基于学校的远程医疗诊所(sbtc)通过与医疗保健提供者的私人视频会议,为学生提供在正常上学期间获得医疗保健的机会。我们利用在北卡罗莱纳州三个农村地区的学校SBTC开放随时间的变化。我们发现,学校级别的SBTC访问将学生长期缺勤的可能性降低了2.5个百分点(29%),并将缺勤天数减少了约0.8天(10%)。与此相关的是,获得SBTC将数学和阅读考试的可能性提高了1.8-2.0个百分点(约2%)。异质性分析表明,这些影响是由男学生驱动的。最后,我们看到了启发性的证据,即SBTC的使用减少了学生中暴力或与武器有关的违纪行为,但对其他形式的不当行为影响甚微。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
4.80%
发文量
46
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