Literature DB >> 9164766

Health care utilization and cost among children with asthma who were enrolled in a health maintenance organization.

P Lozano1, P Fishman, M VonKorff, J Hecht.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To measure the impact of asthma on the use and cost of health care by children in a managed care organization.
DESIGN: Population-based historical cohort study.
SETTING: A medium-sized staff model health maintenance organization in western Washington state.
SUBJECTS: All 71 818 children, between age 1 to 17 years, who were enrolled and used services during 1992. OUTCOME MEASURES: Children were identified with one or more asthma diagnoses during 1992 using automated encounter data. Nonurgent outpatient visits, pharmacy fills, urgent care visits, and hospital days, as well as associated costs were measured. All services were categorized as asthma care or nonasthma care. Multivariate regression analysis was used to compute marginal cost for asthma (difference in total cost between children with asthma and other children using services, adjusted for covariates).
RESULTS: Treated prevalence of asthma was 4.9%. Children with asthma incurred 88% more costs ($1060.32 vs $563. 81/yr), filled 2.77 times as many prescriptions (11.59 vs 4.19/yr), made 65% more nonurgent outpatient visits (5.75 vs 3.48/yr), and had twice as many inpatient days (.23 vs .11/yr) compared with the general population of children using services. Asthma care represented 37% of all health care received by children with asthma, while the remaining 63% were for nonasthma services. Almost two-thirds of asthma-related costs were attributable to nonurgent outpatient care and prescriptions; only one third was attributable to urgent care and hospitalizations. Controlling for age, sex, and comorbidities, the marginal cost of asthma was $615.17/yr (95% confidence interval $502.73, $727.61), which includes asthma as well as nonasthma services. This marginal cost represents 58% of all health care costs for children with asthma.
CONCLUSIONS: Children with asthma use significantly more health services (and incur significantly more costs) than other children using services, attributable largely to asthma care. The majority of all health care costs for children with asthma were for nonasthma services. Urgent care visits and hospitalizations are less important components of asthma costs in this managed care organization than has been found in other national studies.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9164766     DOI: 10.1542/peds.99.6.757

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


  18 in total

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3.  Shared decision-making and health care expenditures among children with special health care needs.

Authors:  Alexander G Fiks; Stephanie Mayne; A Russell Localio; Evaline A Alessandrini; James P Guevara
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2011-12-19       Impact factor: 7.124

4.  Patient-reported care coordination: associations with primary care continuity and specialty care use.

Authors:  David T Liss; Jessica Chubak; Melissa L Anderson; Kathleen W Saunders; Leah Tuzzio; Robert J Reid
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5.  Practice-level effects of interventions to improve asthma care in primary care settings: the Pediatric Asthma Care Patient Outcomes Research Team.

Authors:  Jonathan A Finkelstein; Paula Lozano; Anne L Fuhlbrigge; Vincent J Carey; Thomas S Inui; Stephen B Soumerai; Sean D Sullivan; Edward H Wagner; Scott T Weiss; Kevin B Weiss
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6.  Factors associated with completion of a behavioral intervention for caregivers of urban children with asthma.

Authors:  Arlene M Butz; Jill S Halterman; Melissa Bellin; Joan Kub; Kevin D Frick; Cassia Lewis-Land; Jennifer Walker; Michele Donithan; Mona Tsoukleris; Mary Elizabeth Bollinger
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7.  Emergency department use among Michigan children with special health care needs: an introductory study.

Authors:  Harold A Pollack; Kevin J Dombkowski; Janet B Zimmerman; Matthew M Davis; Anne E Cowan; John R Wheeler; A Craig Hillemeier; Gary L Freed
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8.  Asthma, hay fever, and food allergy are associated with caregiver-reported speech disorders in US children.

Authors:  Mark A Strom; Jonathan I Silverberg
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9.  Profile of medical charges for children by health status group and severity level in a Washington State Health Plan.

Authors:  John M Neff; Virginia L Sharp; John Muldoon; Jeff Graham; Kristin Myers
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 3.402

Review 10.  Economic burden of asthma: a systematic review.

Authors:  Katayoun Bahadori; Mary M Doyle-Waters; Carlo Marra; Larry Lynd; Kadria Alasaly; John Swiston; J Mark FitzGerald
Journal:  BMC Pulm Med       Date:  2009-05-19       Impact factor: 3.317

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