研究人员发现,在低收入家庭的孩子更能获得医疗和牙科照顾下的医疗和牙科保健服务,或儿童健康保险计划(芯片),而不是由私人保险所覆盖的儿童。然而,对于所有类型的保险覆盖面,获得儿科专业护理是一个挑战。
阿曼达Kreider “在不断变化的景观的儿科病人保护和支付得起的医疗保险法案,这是一个很好的时间给重新关注这些健康保险的选择孩子的相对质量,说:”首席作者阿曼达Kreider,在费城儿童医院从policylab(CHOP)。
这项研究今天在线发表在JAMA儿科。
The PolicyLab study analyzed experiences reported by family members in a national sample of over 80,000 children from households with low to moderate income。
The researchers examined access to and use of health care across four different types of insurance — Medicaid, CHIP, private insurance, and uninsured — for children in households with incomes between 100 percent and 300 percent of the federal poverty level。
Using data taken from the US National Surveys of Children’s Health between 2003 and 2012, the study team analyzed a sample of 80,655 children up to age 17, weighted to 67 million children nationally。 The researchers measured caregiver-reported outcomes related to access to primary and specialty care, unmet needs, out-of-pocket costs, care coordination, and satisfaction with care。 By studying these outcomes over a 10-year period, the researchers were able to capture within-state variation in the income eligibility thresholds for Medicaid and CHIP over time。
Caregivers of children enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP reported a greater perception of insurance always meeting their needs (78 percent) than caregivers of privately insured children (73 percent)。 Among children insured by Medicaid or CHIP, 88 percent had access to preventive medical care compared to 83 percent of privately insured children。 The trend was similar for preventive dental care, in which 80 percent of children on Medicaid and 77 percent of those under CHIP had access to care, compared to 73 percent of privately insured children。
Among children in all coverage types, accessing specialty care was a challenge, with as many as one in four children having difficulty seeing a specialist。 However, these challenges were amplified for children insured by CHIP (28 percent) and for privately insured children with special health care needs (29 percent)。
Additionally, caregivers of privately insured children were much more likely to experience out-of-pocket costs (77 percent) than were caregivers of children insured by CHIP (38 percent) and Medicaid (26 percent)。
David M。 Rubin, MD “I think a lot of people might be surprised to learn that families perceive a greater quality of access to care and lower out-of-pocket costs within Medicaid and CHIP compared to commercial insurance,” said David Rubin, MD, MSCE, senior researcher on the study team。 “The value of Medicaid and CHIP for families in this country is frequently debated among our leaders, but the value of this study is the nationally representative data provided by families themselves。”
The study’s findings reveal important differences that can help guide future policymaking regarding coverage for families with low to moderate income。 The authors add that these differences will require ongoing evaluation to ensure that policy decisions are responsive to the health coverage needs of children and families。
“While our findings suggest a high quality of coverage for children enrolled in the Medicaid and CHIP programs relative to private insurance, it is important that concerns about specialty access are not overlooked,” said Kreider。 “There has been an erosion in confidence about access to pediatric specialty care, and we need to understand why this is happening and respond accordingly。”
Rubin explained that one way to ensure more comprehensive coverage for children in private plans offered on the exchanges would be to require these plans to match the benefit and cost-sharing provisions that are mandatory in Medicaid。 “My worry would be that new insurance practices in the commercial market that are now tiering specialty providers as out-of-network for families are prohibiting access for children with special healthcare needs。 We may have reached a point at which it is necessary to regulate the commercial insurance market to ensure that the benefits for children are equivalent to our Medicaid and best CHIP plans。”
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