Association between Unmet Social Need and Ambulatory Quality of Care for US Children

Children who experience socioeconomic adversity often have worse health; however, less is known about their quality of care. We sought to evaluate the association between parent/caregiver-reported socioeconomic adversity and quality of pediatric primary, acute, and chronic ambulatory care on a natio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic pediatrics 2024-10, p.102589, Article 102589
Hauptverfasser: Geanacopoulos, Alexandra T., Branley, Claire, Garg, Arvin, Samuels-Kalow, Margaret E., Gabbay, Jonathan M., Peltz, Alon
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Children who experience socioeconomic adversity often have worse health; however, less is known about their quality of care. We sought to evaluate the association between parent/caregiver-reported socioeconomic adversity and quality of pediatric primary, acute, and chronic ambulatory care on a national level. This was a retrospective cohort study of 5368 representative US children (1–17 years) in the 2021 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Socioeconomic adversity was defined as parent/caregiver-reported food, housing, transportation, or utility insecurity in the past 12 months. Outcomes included 10 quality measures of primary, acute, and chronic care, and experience of care measured through parent/caregiver survey. We described variation in socioeconomic adversity and used multivariable regression to examine associations with quality outcomes. One-third of parent/caregivers reported socioeconomic adversity. Food insecurity (23.6%) was most common followed by utility (19.5%), housing (15.0%), and transportation (4.7%) insecurity. Black (53.2%) and Hispanic (46.9%) parent/caregivers experienced the highest rates of socioeconomic adversity. Children with socioeconomic adversity received lower quality of care for four quality measures, including more frequent Emergency Department visits (Odds Ratio (OR)= 1.69 [95% Confidence Interval (CI): 1.28–2.23]), less favorable asthma medication ratio (OR=0.04 [95% CI: 0.01–0.31]), and less frequent well child (OR=0.73 [95% CI: 0.59–0.90]) and dental care (OR=0.76 [95% CI: 0.63–0.94], P 
ISSN:1876-2859
1876-2867
1876-2867
DOI:10.1016/j.acap.2024.10.001