利用 "向机会迈进 "实验,按特定临床病症和服务类型调查邻里关系对医疗保健使用的长期影响。

IF 2.8 3区 经济学 Q2 DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
Housing Policy Debate Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-09-10 DOI:10.1080/10511482.2021.1951804
Craig Evan Pollack, Debra G Bozzi, Amanda L Blackford, Stefanie DeLuca, Rachel Thornton, Bradley Herring
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引用次数: 4

摘要

我们对 "向机会迈进"(MTO)社会实验进行了二次分析,以调查不同类型的住房援助和社区环境对特定病症和不同类型医疗服务的长期医疗使用模式的影响。MTO 参与者在基线时进行了随机分组,并与长达 21 年的所有支付者医院出院和医疗补助数据建立了联系。在随机分配的 9170 名儿童中,与对照组相比,获得医疗券的儿童随后的哮喘入院率降低了 36%,精神疾病入院率降低了 30%;医疗券组的精神科服务、医院门诊服务、诊所服务和耐用医疗设备的使用率也较低。成人的研究结果没有统计学意义。研究结果表明,住房政策若能减少儿童时期邻里间的贫困状况,则其后特定临床病症和服务类型的医疗保健使用率就会降低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using the Moving To Opportunity Experiment to Investigate the Long-Term Impact of Neighborhoods on Healthcare Use by Specific Clinical Conditions and Type of Service.

We performed a secondary analysis of the Moving To Opportunity (MTO) social experiment to investigate the impact of different types of housing assistance and neighborhood environments on long-term patterns of health care use for specific conditions and across different types of health care services. MTO participants, who were randomized at baseline, were linked to up to 21 years of all-payer hospital discharge and Medicaid data. Among the 9,170 children at the time of randomization, those who received a voucher had subsequent hospital admissions rates that were 36% lower for asthma and 30% lower for mental health disorders compared to the control group; rates of psychiatric services, outpatient hospital services, clinic services and durable medical equipment were also lower among the voucher groups. Findings for adults were not statistically significant. The results suggest that housing policies that reduce neighborhood poverty exposure as a child are associated with lower subsequent healthcare use for specific clinical conditions and types of services.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
17.20%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: Housing Policy Debate provides a venue for original research on U.S. housing policy. Subjects include affordable housing policy, fair housing policy, land use regulations influencing housing affordability, metropolitan development trends, and linkages among housing policy and energy, environmental, and transportation policy. Housing Policy Debate is published quarterly. Most issues feature a Forum section and an Articles section. The Forum, which highlights a current debate, features a central article and responding comments that represent a range of perspectives. All articles in the Forum and Articles sections undergo a double-blind peer review process.
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