Artigo Revisado por pares

The impact of realized access to care on health-related quality of life: A two-year prospective cohort study of children in the California State Children’s Health Insurance Program

2006; Elsevier BV; Volume: 149; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jpeds.2006.04.024

ISSN

1097-6833

Autores

Michael Seid, James W. Varni, Lesley Cummings, Matthias Schonlau,

Tópico(s)

Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare

Resumo

Objective To examine the effect of realized access to care (problems getting care, access to needed care) on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in the California State Children’s Health Insurance Program. Study design This was a prospective cohort study (n = 4,925; 70.5% [3438] had complete data). Surveys were taken at enrollment and after 1 and 2 years in the program. Parents and children reported HRQOL (PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales). Repeated-measures analysis accounted for within-person correlation and adjusted for baseline PedsQL™, baseline realized access, race/ethnicity, language, chronic health condition, and having a regular physician. Results Realized access to care during the prior year was related to HRQOL for each subsequent year. Foregone care and problems getting care were associated with decrements of 3.5 (P < .001) and 4.5 (P < .001) points for parent proxy-report PedsQL™ and with decrements of 3.2 (P < .001) and 4.4 (P < .001) points for child self-report PedsQL™. Improved realized access resulted in higher PedsQL™ scores, continued realized access resulted in sustained PedsQL™ scores, and foregone care resulted in cumulative declines in PedsQL™ scores. Conclusions Realized access to care is associated with statistically significant and clinically meaningful changes in HRQOL in children enrolled in the California State Children’s Health Insurance Program. To examine the effect of realized access to care (problems getting care, access to needed care) on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in the California State Children’s Health Insurance Program. This was a prospective cohort study (n = 4,925; 70.5% [3438] had complete data). Surveys were taken at enrollment and after 1 and 2 years in the program. Parents and children reported HRQOL (PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales). Repeated-measures analysis accounted for within-person correlation and adjusted for baseline PedsQL™, baseline realized access, race/ethnicity, language, chronic health condition, and having a regular physician. Realized access to care during the prior year was related to HRQOL for each subsequent year. Foregone care and problems getting care were associated with decrements of 3.5 (P < .001) and 4.5 (P < .001) points for parent proxy-report PedsQL™ and with decrements of 3.2 (P < .001) and 4.4 (P < .001) points for child self-report PedsQL™. Improved realized access resulted in higher PedsQL™ scores, continued realized access resulted in sustained PedsQL™ scores, and foregone care resulted in cumulative declines in PedsQL™ scores. Realized access to care is associated with statistically significant and clinically meaningful changes in HRQOL in children enrolled in the California State Children’s Health Insurance Program.

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