Caregivers’ Health Literacy and Their Young Children’s Oral-health–related Expenditures

Caregivers’ health literacy has emerged as an important determinant of young children’s health care and outcomes. We examined the hypothesis that caregivers’ health literacy influences children’s oral-health-care–related expenditures. This was a prospective cohort study of 1,132 child/caregiver dyad...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of dental research 2013-07, Vol.92 (7_suppl), p.S55-S62
Hauptverfasser: Vann, W.F., Divaris, K., Gizlice, Z., Baker, A.D., Lee, J.Y.
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container_end_page S62
container_issue 7_suppl
container_start_page S55
container_title Journal of dental research
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creator Vann, W.F.
Divaris, K.
Gizlice, Z.
Baker, A.D.
Lee, J.Y.
description Caregivers’ health literacy has emerged as an important determinant of young children’s health care and outcomes. We examined the hypothesis that caregivers’ health literacy influences children’s oral-health-care–related expenditures. This was a prospective cohort study of 1,132 child/caregiver dyads (children’s mean age = 19 months), participating in the Carolina Oral Health Literacy Project. Health literacy was measured by the REALD-30 (word recognition based) and NVS (comprehension based) instruments. Follow-up data included child Medicaid claims for CY2008-10. We quantified expenditures using annualized 2010 fee-adjusted Medicaid-paid dollars for oral-health–related visits involving preventive, restorative, and emergency care. We used descriptive, bivariate, and multivariate statistical methods based on generalized gamma models. Mean oral-health–related annual expenditures totaled $203: preventive—$81, restorative—$99, and emergency care—$22. Among children who received services, mean expenditures were: emergency hospital-based—$1282, preventive—$106, and restorative care—$343. Caregivers’ low literacy in the oral health context was associated with a statistically non-significant increase in total expenditures (average annual difference = $40; 95% confidence interval, -32, 111). Nevertheless, with both instruments, emergency dental care expenditures were consistently elevated among children of low-literacy caregivers. These findings provide initial support for health literacy as an important determinant of the meaningful use and cost of oral health care.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Caregivers
Child, Preschool
Children
Children & youth
Cohort analysis
Cohort Studies
Dental Care - economics
Dental Care - statistics & numerical data
Dental Service, Hospital - economics
Dentistry, Operative - economics
Educational Status
Emergency medical care
Emergency Medical Services - economics
Enrollments
Expenditures
Female
Financing, Personal
Follow-Up Studies
Food stamps
Health education
Health Expenditures
Health Literacy
Health Services Research
Humans
Hypotheses
Infant
Insurance Claim Review - economics
Language
Male
Medicaid
Medicaid - economics
North Carolina
Oral hygiene
Pattern recognition
Population
Preventive Dentistry - economics
Prospective Studies
Quality of life
Sociodemographics
Statistical analysis
United States
Young Adult
title Caregivers’ Health Literacy and Their Young Children’s Oral-health–related Expenditures
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