OBJECTIVE: This project was designed to explore the utilization of specific health care resources by obese compared with nonobese women in a primary care setting. METHOD: Eighty-three obese women, consecutively identified during nonemergent appointments in a primary care health maintenance organization (HMO) setting, were compared with 111 nonobese women with regard to several parameters of health care utilization. All participants' medical records were reviewed for the preceding 12 months for the number of diagnoses, combined telephone and physician contacts with the facility, different physicians seen, and prescriptions. RESULTS: Increasing body mass index (BMI) was predictive of a greater number of diagnoses, contacts with the facility, total number of prescriptions, and number of different physicians seen. After controlling for the number of diagnoses, BMI remained predictive of the number of different physicians seen. DISCUSSION: Our findings indicate that increasing BMI is associated with greater health care utilization, primarily through greater morbidity. Additionally, there may also be particular psychosocial and illness factors which contribute to obese women's patterns of physician contact.
OBJECTIVE: This project was designed to explore the utilization of specific health care resources by obese compared with nonobese women in a primary care setting. METHOD: Eighty-three obesewomen, consecutively identified during nonemergent appointments in a primary care health maintenance organization (HMO) setting, were compared with 111 nonobese women with regard to several parameters of health care utilization. All participants' medical records were reviewed for the preceding 12 months for the number of diagnoses, combined telephone and physician contacts with the facility, different physicians seen, and prescriptions. RESULTS: Increasing body mass index (BMI) was predictive of a greater number of diagnoses, contacts with the facility, total number of prescriptions, and number of different physicians seen. After controlling for the number of diagnoses, BMI remained predictive of the number of different physicians seen. DISCUSSION: Our findings indicate that increasing BMI is associated with greater health care utilization, primarily through greater morbidity. Additionally, there may also be particular psychosocial and illness factors which contribute to obesewomen's patterns of physician contact.
Authors: Patricia Markham Risica; Martin A Weinstock; William Rakowski; Usree Kirtania; Rosemarie A Martin; Kevin J Smith Journal: Am J Prev Med Date: 2008-07 Impact factor: 5.043