Literature DB >> 16043671

Health care expenditures of immigrants in the United States: a nationally representative analysis.

Sarita A Mohanty1, Steffie Woolhandler, David U Himmelstein, Susmita Pati, Olveen Carrasquillo, David H Bor.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We compared the health care expenditures of immigrants residing in the United States with health care expenditures of US-born persons.
METHODS: We used the 1998 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey linked to the 1996-1997 National Health Interview Survey to analyze data on 18398 US-born persons and 2843 immigrants. Using a 2-part regression model, we estimated total health care expenditures, as well as expenditures for emergency department (ED) visits, office-based visits, hospital-based outpatient visits, inpatient visits, and prescription drugs.
RESULTS: Immigrants accounted for $39.5 billion (SE=$4 billion) in health care expenditures. After multivariate adjustment, per capita total health care expenditures of immigrants were 55% lower than those of US-born persons ($1139 vs $2546). Similarly, expenditures for uninsured and publicly insured immigrants were approximately half those of their US-born counterparts. Immigrant children had 74% lower per capita health care expenditures than US-born children. However, ED expenditures were more than 3 times higher for immigrant children than for US-born children.
CONCLUSIONS: Health care expenditures are substantially lower for immigrants than for US-born persons. Our study refutes the assumption that immigrants represent a disproportionate financial burden on the US health care system.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16043671      PMCID: PMC1449377          DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2004.044602

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  19 in total

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6.  Factors associated with prescription drug expenditures among children: an analysis of the Medical Expenditure Panel survey.

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9.  Toward estimating the impact of changes in immigrants' insurance eligibility on hospital expenditures for uncompensated care.

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4.  Impact of Medicare Age Eligibility on Health Spending among U.S. and Foreign-Born Adults.

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7.  Health services utilization by low-income limited English proficient adults.

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10.  Health care expenditures among Asian American subgroups.

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