Usual Source of Care as a Health Insurance Substitute for U.S. Adults With Diabetes?

Author:

DeVoe Jennifer E.1,Tillotson Carrie J.2,Wallace Lorraine S.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon;

2. Oregon Clinical and Translational Research Institute and the Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon;

3. University of Tennessee Graduate School of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine, Knoxville, Tennessee.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of health insurance and/or a usual source of care (USC) on receipt of diabetic-specific services and health care barriers for U.S. adults with diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Secondary analyses of data from 6,562 diabetic individuals aged ≥18 years from the nationally representative Medical Expenditure Panel Survey from 2002 to 2005 were performed. Outcome measures included receipt of seven diabetic services plus five barriers to care. RESULTS More than 84% of diabetic individuals in the U.S. had full-year coverage and a USC; 2.3% had neither one. In multivariate analyses, the uninsured with no USC had one-fifth the odds of receiving A1C screening (odds ratio 0.23 [95% CI 0.14–0.38]) and one-tenth the odds of a blood pressure check (0.08 [0.05–0.15]), compared with insured diabetic individuals with a USC. Similarly, being uninsured without a USC was associated with 5.5 times the likelihood of unmet medical needs (5.51 [3.49–8.70]) and three times more delayed urgent care (3.13 [1.53–6.38]) compared with being insured with a USC. Among the two groups with either insurance or a USC, diabetic individuals with only a USC had rates of diabetes-specific care more similar to those of insured individuals with a USC. In contrast, those with only insurance were closer to the reference group with fewer barriers to care. CONCLUSIONS Insured diabetic individuals with a USC were better off than those with only a USC, only insurance, or neither one. Policy reforms must target both the financing and the delivery systems to achieve increased receipt of diabetes services and decreased barriers to care.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference25 articles.

1. National Diabetes Statistics [article online], 2007. Available from http://diabetes.niddk.nih.gov/dm/pubs/statistics. Accessed 27 October 2008

2. Standards of medical care in diabetes—2008;American Diabetes Association;Diabetes Care,2008

3. Healthy People 2010 [article online], 2009. Available from http://www.healthypeople.gov. Accessed 8 February 2009

4. Impact of the population at risk of diabetes on projections of diabetes burden in the United States: an epidemic on the way;Mainous;Diabetologia,2007

5. Racial and ethnic differences in health care access and health outcomes for adults with type 2 diabetes;Harris;Diabetes Care,2001

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