| Literature DB >> 25395597 |
Brent A Langellier1, Jie Chen2, Arturo Vargas-Bustamante3, Moira Inkelas3, Alexander N Ortega3.
Abstract
It is important to understand the source of health-care disparities between Latinos and other children in the United States. We examine parent-reported health-care access and utilization among Latino, White, and Black children (≤17 years old) in the United States in the 2006-2011 National Health Interview Survey. Using Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition, we portion health-care disparities into two parts (1) those attributable to differences in the levels of sociodemographic characteristics (e.g., income) and (2) those attributable to differences in group-specific regression coefficients that measure the health-care 'return' Latino, White, and Black children receive on these characteristics. In the United States, Latino children are less likely than Whites to have a usual source of care, receive at least one preventive care visit, and visit a doctor, and are more likely to have delayed care. The return on sociodemographic characteristics explains 20-30% of the disparity between Latino and White children in the usual source of care, delayed care, and doctor visits and 40-50% of the disparity between Latinos and Blacks in emergency department use and preventive care. Much of the health-care disadvantage experienced by Latino children would persist if Latinos had the sociodemographic characteristics as Whites and Blacks.Entities:
Keywords: Access to care; Latinos; child health; health care; health disparities; race/ethnicity
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25395597 PMCID: PMC4430463 DOI: 10.1177/1367493514555587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Health Care ISSN: 1367-4935 Impact factor: 1.979