Literature DB >> 8002349

Results of the ACSUS for pediatric AIDS patients: utilization of services, functional status, and social severity.

M C Fahs1, D Waite, M Sesholtz, C Muller, E A Hintz, C Maffeo, P Arno, C Bennett.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study describes demographic characteristics of pediatric AIDS patients, describes hospital and community-based service utilization patterns, and analyzes medical and social support service usage patterns with respect to patient demographic characteristics, clinical trial participation, functional/developmental status, and social environment. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY
SETTING: Data reported in this study are from the AIDS Costs and Service Utilization Survey (ACSUS) and cover the six-month period beginning March 1991 (N = 135). Pediatric patients who sought care for HIV-related problems were sampled at seven different hospitals in five metropolitan regions of the United States. All of the participating hospitals had clinics specifically serving pediatric patients infected with HIV. The sample consists of HIV-positive patients who had had at least one HIV-related symptom or condition. STUDY
DESIGN: A stratified probability sample design guided the sampling strategy, which included oversampling in two large hospitals from two of the five metropolitan areas. Survey data cover an 18-month time period of health care utilization, cost, and financing information from HIV-infected patients and their providers. Utilization measures are standardized to a six-month period. Per capita income, family structure, informal personal network, functional status, and clinical trial participation are tested for associations with patterns of utilization. In addition, a weighted ten-point social severity scale was developed to assess family/household stability. DATA COLLECTION: Data were collected through a screener instrument completed by the person accompanying the child to a hospital clinic visit (usually a a parent), and through two interviews conducted in person with the patients' primary caregivers. Data from the questionnaires were coded and assembled into computerized SAS analysis files by WESTAT: PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: Children in this sample are 62 percent African American, 25 percent Hispanic, and 10 percent White. Medicaid is the primary payer for 92 percent. Mean per capita income is $3,440. Fewer than one-half (41 percent) of the families of the children receive Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC). (AFDC). Within the six-month period, approximately one-third of the sample (29.6 percent) was hospitalized. Mean length of stay was 16.0 days. Clinical trial participation was positively related to mean number of hospital clinic visits and receipt of formal (paid) home care. There were no differences in use of community clinic, mental health, and inpatient facilities by clinical trial status. Participation in clinical trials was positively related to income and negatively related to social severity. In four cities, emergency room use was consistently lower for clinical trial participants than for nonparticipants.
CONCLUSIONS: Data from the first six months of the ACSUS pediatric sample suggest that participation in clinical trials may bring about access to social services that appear to reduce emergency room use. However, the findings reported here are descriptive and exploratory. Further multivariate, nonparametric analyses of the full 18-month provider-patient merged data set are necessary to confirm the simple correlations found in this study.

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Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8002349      PMCID: PMC1070027     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Res        ISSN: 0017-9124            Impact factor:   3.402


  19 in total

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Authors:  T V Ellerbrock; T J Bush; M E Chamberland; M J Oxtoby
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2.  Pediatric AIDS in the United States: epidemiological reality versus government policy.

Authors:  A E Birn; J Santelli; L G Burwell
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3.  Insuring the children: a decade of change.

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4.  America's children: economic perspectives and policy options.

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5.  Pediatric human immunodeficiency virus infection and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. A health care crisis of children and families.

Authors:  R B Van Dyke
Journal:  Am J Dis Child       Date:  1991-05

6.  Pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome hospitalizations in New Jersey.

Authors:  R Conviser; C M Grant; M J Coye
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  1991-05       Impact factor: 7.124

Review 7.  Children, adolescents and AIDS.

Authors:  M L Stuber
Journal:  Psychiatr Med       Date:  1991

8.  Pediatric AIDS: comparative cranial MRI and CT scans.

Authors:  M C Chamberlain; S L Nichols; C H Chase
Journal:  Pediatr Neurol       Date:  1991 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.372

9.  Lifetime Medicaid service utilization and expenditures for AIDS in New York and California.

Authors:  R M Andrews; M A Keyes; T R Fanning; K W Kizer
Journal:  J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr (1988)       Date:  1991

10.  Family members' willingness to care for people with AIDS: a psychosocial assessment model.

Authors:  J R McDonell; N Abell; J Miller
Journal:  Soc Work       Date:  1991-01
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  2 in total

1.  Use and cost of hospital and community service provision for children with HIV infection at an English HIV referral centre.

Authors:  E J Beck; S Mandalia; R Griffith; J Beecham; M D Walters; M Boulton; D L Miller
Journal:  Pharmacoeconomics       Date:  2000-01       Impact factor: 4.981

2.  The economic burden of home care for children with HIV and other chronic illnesses.

Authors:  Leslie S Wilson; Judith Tedlie Moskowitz; Michael Acree; Melvin B Heyman; Paul Harmatz; Stephen J Ferrando; Susan Folkman
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  2 in total

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