Literature DB >> 7474188

The effect of gaps in health insurance on continuity of a regular source of care among preschool-aged children in the United States.

M D Kogan1, G R Alexander, M A Teitelbaum, B W Jack, M Kotelchuck, G Pappas.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the prevalence and length of gaps in health insurance coverage and their effect on having a regular source of care in a national sample of preschool-aged children.
DESIGN: Follow-up survey of a nationally representative sample of 3-year-old children in the US population by phone or personal interview. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 8129 children whose mothers were interviewed for the 1991 longitudinal Follow-up to the National Maternal and infant Health Survey. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Report of any gap in health insurance for the children, the length of the gap, and the number of different sites where the children were taken for medical care as a measure of continuity of a regular source of care.
RESULTS: About one quarter of Us children were without health insurance for at least 1 month during their first 3 years of life. Over half of these children had a health insurance gap of more than 6 months. Less than half of US children had only one site of care during their first 3 years. Children with health insurance gaps of longer than 6 months were at increased risk of having more than one care site (odds ratio = 1.52; 95% confidence interval, 1.19 to 1.96). This risk further increased when an emergency treatment was discounted as a multiple site of care.
CONCLUSIONS: Having a gap in health insurance coverage is an important determinant for not having a regular source of care for preschool-aged children. This finding is of concern, given the sizable percentage of children in the United States who lacked continuous health care coverage during a critical period of development.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7474188

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


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