Literature DB >> 8416505

Childhood asthma and poverty: differential impacts and utilization of health services.

N Halfon1, P W Newacheck.   

Abstract

Data from the 1988 National Health Interview Survey on Child Health showed that 4.3% of all children younger than 17 years of age had asthma, with poor children demonstrating a slightly greater prevalence than nonpoor (4.8 poor vs 4.2 nonpoor). This poor/nonpoor differential was even greater for children younger than 6 years old (4.2 vs 3.1). Poor children were also more likely to have had more than 7 bed days in the past year because of their asthma. Measures of health service utilization showed that poor children had 40% fewer doctor visits (3.2 vs 5.4) and had 40% more hospitalizations in the previous year (10.6% vs 7.4%). Although more than 90% of all children had a usual source of routine and/or sick care, poor children were more likely to receive routine care in a neighborhood health center (15.1% vs 1.6%) or hospital-based clinic (11.1% vs 2.8%) than in a doctor's office (67.2% vs 91.1%) and, when sick, then were more than four times more likely to report an emergency department as a usual source of care (8.1% vs 1.7%). Diminished accessibility to appropriate outpatient health services for poor children with asthma was associated with increased morbidity, measured by hospitalization, and bed days. These findings have significant implications for the development of comprehensive models of care and the potential role that community clinics could play with increased funding as a result of Medicaid changes that were instituted as part of the 1989 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8416505

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


  74 in total

1.  Social deprivation and patterns of consultation for respiratory symptoms: a population-based cohort study.

Authors:  P M Trinder; P R Croft; M Jones; G Thomas; J Bashford; M Dudgon
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 3.710

2.  Asthma prevalence among American Indian and Alaska Native children.

Authors:  J W Stout; M Sullivan; L L Liu; D C Grossman
Journal:  Public Health Rep       Date:  1999 May-Jun       Impact factor: 2.792

3.  Asthma and poverty.

Authors:  R J Rona
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 9.139

4.  Socioeconomic risk factors in the prevalence of asthma and other atopic diseases in children 6 to 7 years old in Valencia Spain.

Authors:  M M Suárez-Varela; A L González; M I Martínez Selva
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  1999-01       Impact factor: 8.082

Review 5.  Elevated asthma morbidity in Puerto Rican children: a review of possible risk and prognostic factors.

Authors:  M Lara; H Morgenstern; N Duan; R H Brook
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1999-02

Review 6.  Environmental causes of asthma in inner city children. The National Cooperative Inner City Asthma Study.

Authors:  P A Eggleston
Journal:  Clin Rev Allergy Immunol       Date:  2000-06       Impact factor: 8.667

7.  The nature of increased hospital use in poor neighbourhoods: findings from a Canadian inner city.

Authors:  R H Glazier; E M Badley; J E Gilbert; L Rothman
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2000 Jul-Aug

Review 8.  Hotep's story: exploring the wounds of health vulnerability in the US.

Authors:  Ken Fox
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2002

9.  Diagnostic and treatment behaviour in children with chronic respiratory symptoms: relationship with socioeconomic factors.

Authors:  G Ng Man Kwong; C Das; A R Proctor; M K B Whyte; R A Primhak
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  2002-08       Impact factor: 9.139

10.  Single parent households and increased child asthma morbidity.

Authors:  Terri Moncrief; Andrew F Beck; Jeffrey M Simmons; Bin Huang; Robert S Kahn
Journal:  J Asthma       Date:  2014-01-09       Impact factor: 2.515

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