Am
J Respir Crit Care Med 1998 Aug;158(2):371-7.
Health service use by African Americans and Caucasians with asthma in
a managed care setting.
Zoratti EM, Havstad S, Rodriguez J, Robens-Paradise Y, Lafata JE, McCarthy
B.
Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Department of Biostatistics
and Research Epidemiology, Center for Clinical Effectiveness, Henry Ford
Health System, Detroit, Michigan, USA.
Managed care plan members provide a population for analysis that minimizes
the financial barriers to routine medical care that have been linked to
high rates of asthma-related hospitalization, emergency care, and mortality
among urban African Americans. We examined patterns of asthma care among
464 African American (AA) and 1,609 Caucasian (C) asthma patients, age
15 to 45 yr, in a southeast Michigan managed care system during 1993.
Compared with C, AA had fewer visits to asthma specialists (0.32 versus
0.50 visits/yr, p = 0.002), and filled fewer prescriptions for inhaled
steroids (1.44 versus 1.74 Rx/yr, p = 0.038), while being more likely
to visit the emergency department with asthma (0.71 versus 0.28 visits/yr,
p < 0. 001), to be hospitalized with asthma (0.08 versus 0.03 admissions/yr,
p = 0.002), or to have filled prescriptions for oral steroids (0.91 versus
0.59 Rx/yr, p < 0.001). AA were equally likely to have visited a primary
care physician for asthma (0.95 versus 0.93 visits/yr, p = 0.81). Similar
physician visit profiles and discrepancies in the use of oral steroids
persisted when analyzing exclusively low socioeconomic status subgroups.
These results suggest that ethnic differences in patterns of asthma-related
health care persist within managed care settings and are only partially
due to financial barriers.
PMID: 9700109 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]