Literature DB >> 3991284

Consequences of cost-sharing for children's health.

R B Valdez, R H Brook, W H Rogers, J E Ware, E B Keeler, C A Sherbourne, K N Lohr, G A Goldberg, P Camp, J P Newhouse.   

Abstract

Do children whose families bear a percentage of their health care costs reduce their use of ambulatory care compared with those families who receive free care? If so, does the reduction affect their health? To answer these questions, 1,844 children aged 0 to 13 years were randomly assigned (for a period of 3 or 5 years) to one of 14 insurance plans. The plans differed in the percentage of their medical bills that families paid. One plan provided free care. The others required up to 95% coinsurance subject to a +1,000 maximum. Children whose families paid a percentage of costs reduced use by up to one third. For the typical child in the study, this reduction caused no significant difference in either parental perceptions of their child's health or in physiologic measures of health. Confidence intervals are sufficiently narrow for most measures to rule out the possibility that large true differences went undetected. Nor were statistically significant differences observed for children at risk of disease. Wider confidence intervals for these comparisons, however, mean that clinically meaningful differences, if present, could have been undetected in certain subgroups.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1985        PMID: 3991284

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


  9 in total

1.  Changes in the healthcare system. Goals, forces, solutions.

Authors:  R H Brook
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 4.981

Review 2.  A framework for cost-sharing policy analysis.

Authors:  R J Rubin; D N Mendelson
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 4.981

3.  The effect of user charges and socio-demographic environment on paediatric trauma hospitalisation in Helsinki in 1989-1994.

Authors:  J Ahlamaa-Tuompo
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 8.082

4.  Effects of cost sharing on physiological health, health practices, and worry.

Authors:  E B Keeler; E M Sloss; R H Brook; B H Operskalski; G A Goldberg; J P Newhouse
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  1987-08       Impact factor: 3.402

5.  Is more better than less? An analysis of children's mental health services.

Authors:  E M Foster
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2000-12       Impact factor: 3.402

Review 6.  The health of children.

Authors:  P G Szilagyi; E L Schor
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  1998-10       Impact factor: 3.402

7.  High-deductible health plans: are vulnerable families enrolled?

Authors:  Alison A Galbraith; Dennis Ross-Degnan; Stephen B Soumerai; Irina Miroshnik; J Frank Wharam; Kenneth Kleinman; Tracy A Lieu
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2009-04       Impact factor: 7.124

8.  Pediatric outpatient utilization by differing Medicaid payment models in the United States.

Authors:  Therese L Canares; Ari Friedman; Jonathan Rodean; Rebecca R Burns; Deena Berkowitz; Matt Hall; Elizabeth Alpern; Amanda Montalbano
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-06-12       Impact factor: 2.655

9.  Can Social Policies Improve Health? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of 38 Randomized Trials.

Authors:  Emilie Courtin; Sooyoung Kim; Shanshan Song; Wenya Yu; Peter Muennig
Journal:  Milbank Q       Date:  2020-03-19       Impact factor: 4.911

  9 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.