Literature DB >> 23776121

Racial and ethnic differences in subspecialty service use by children with autism.

Sarabeth Broder-Fingert1, Amy Shui, Christian D Pulcini, Daniel Kurowski, James M Perrin.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe racial differences in use of specialty care among children with autism spectrum disorder.
METHODS: We identified patients ages 2 to 21 years with an International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision code of autism (299.0) seen from 2000 to 2011 at a major academic health center by using a research patient data repository and determined rates of specialty provider visits and procedures by race. We then used logistic regression to determine the associations of rates of subspecialty visits and procedures with race and ethnicity, controlling for gender, age, and payer type.
RESULTS: We identified 3615 patients (2935 white, 243 Hispanic, 188 African American, and 249 other). The most striking differences were in use of gastroenterology (GI)/nutrition services. Nonwhite children were less likely to use GI/nutrition specialty providers (African American, odds ratio = 0.32 [95th percentile confidence interval: 0.18-0.55]; Hispanic, 0.32 [0.20-0.51]; other, 0.56 [0.34-0.92]) as well as neurology (African American, 0.52 [0.33-0.83]; Hispanic, 0.40 [0.27-0.59]) and psychiatry/psychology (African American, 0.44 [0.27-0.72]; Hispanic, 0.60 [0.41-0.88]; other, 0.62 [0.38-0.99]). Nonwhite children were less likely to have had GI studies: colonoscopy (African American, 0.23 [0.10-0.53]; Hispanic, 0.26 [0.14-0.50]), endoscopy (African American, 0.31 [0.16-0.58]; Hispanic, 0.27 [0.16-0.46]; other, 0.53 [0.31-0.90]), and stool studies (African American, 0.49 [0.30-0.91]). Hispanic children had lower rates of neurologic and other testing: EEG (Hispanic, 0.53 [0.35-0.78]), brain MRI (African American, 0.37 [0.22-0.63]; Hispanic, 0.62 [0.42-0.90]), sleep study (Hispanic, 0.18 [0.04-0.76]), and neuropsychiatric testing (Hispanic, 0.55 [0.32-0.96]).
CONCLUSIONS: We found racial and ethnic differences among children diagnosed with autism in use of care and procedures. Possible explanations for these findings include differences in presentation, referral rates, or referral follow through.

Entities:  

Keywords:  access; autism; diagnosis; racial disparity; specialty care

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23776121     DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-3886

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


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8.  Parent health beliefs, social determinants of health, and child health services utilization among U.S. school-age children with autism.

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9.  Caregiver Voices: Cross-Cultural Input on Improving Access to Autism Services.

Authors:  Aubyn C Stahmer; Sarah Vejnoska; Suzannah Iadarola; Diondra Straiton; Francisco Reinosa Segovia; Paul Luelmo; Elizabeth H Morgan; Hyon Soo Lee; Asim Javed; Briana Bronstein; Samantha Hochheimer; EunMi Cho; Aritz Aranbarri; David Mandell; Elizabeth McGhee Hassrick; Tristram Smith; Connie Kasari
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10.  Predictors of Age of Diagnosis for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: The Role of a Consistent Source of Medical Care, Race, and Condition Severity.

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