医疗安全网的侵蚀:对不同人口群体的影响。

Lee Mobley, Tzy-Mey Kuo, Gloria J Bazzoli
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引用次数: 17

摘要

安全网医院(SNHs)在美国卫生系统中发挥了关键作用,为弱势群体提供医疗保健,特别是医疗补助和无保险人群。然而,很少有研究审查当安全网收缩时这些人口的获取如何变化。机构政策,如医院关闭或所有权转换,可能会影响少数族裔卫生保健提供者的供应,从而加剧结果的差异。我们使用多层次logistic模型对个人水平的医院出院数据进行建模,以考察1990-2000年期间加州安全网的收缩对获得护理的影响,通过门诊护理敏感条件(ACSC)入院的变化来衡量,使用地理方法来表征收缩事件的接近性。我们发现,在统计上,收缩事件的存在与阻碍获取的预测概率显著增加有关,有医疗保险的人群增加了约1%,没有医疗保险的人群增加了约4-5%。随着时间的推移,有医疗补助的群体也保持着最高的ACSC入学率,这表明这个弱势群体持续存在准入问题。鉴于许多州持续存在的预算问题,这项研究是及时的。在这些州,不断上升的失业率使医疗补助计划的参保人数增加了600万,未参保的人数增加了150万,增加了对剩余snh的压力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Erosion in the Healthcare Safety Net: Impacts on Different Population Groups.

Erosion in the Healthcare Safety Net: Impacts on Different Population Groups.

Safety net hospitals (SNHs) have played a critical role in the U.S. health system providing access to health care for vulnerable populations, in particular the Medicaid and uninsured populations. However, little research has examined how access for these populations changes when contraction of the safety net occurs. Institutional policies, such as hospital closure or ownership conversion, could affect the supply of minority health care providers, thus exacerbating disparities in outcomes. We use multilevel logistic modeling of person-level hospital discharge data to examine the effects of contractions in the California safety net over the period of 1990-2000 on access to care as measured by changes in ambulatory care sensitive condition (ACSC) admissions, using geographic methods to characterize proximity to a contraction event. We found that presence of a contraction event was associated with a statistically significant increase in the predicted probability of impeded access, with an increase of about 1% for Medicaid-insured populations and about 4-5% for the uninsured. The Medicaid-insured group also maintained the highest rates of ACSC admissions over time, suggesting persistent access problems for this vulnerable group. This research is timely given continued budget problems in many states, where rising unemployment has increased the number of Medicaid enrollees by 6 million and uninsured individuals by 1.5 million, increasing pressure on remaining SNHs.

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