The Influence of Insurance Status on Access to and Utilization of a Tertiary Hand Surgery Referral Center

被引:84
|
作者
Calfee, Ryan P. [1 ]
Shah, Chirag M. [1 ]
Canham, Colin D. [1 ]
Wong, Ambrose H. W. [1 ]
Gelberman, Richard H. [1 ]
Goldfarb, Charles A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Orthopaed Surg, Div Hand Surg, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
来源
关键词
I TRAUMA CENTER; ORTHOPEDIC INJURIES; INEQUALITIES; PEOPLE; POOR; CARE; NEED;
D O I
10.2106/JBJS.J.01966
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: The purpose of this study was to systematically examine the impact of insurance status on access to and utilization of elective specialty hand surgical care. We hypothesized that patients with Medicaid insurance or those without insurance would have greater difficulty accessing care both in obtaining local surgical care and in reaching a tertiary center for appointments. Methods: This retrospective cohort study included all new patients with orthopaedic hand problems (n = 3988) at a tertiary center in a twelve-month period. Patient insurance status was categorized and clinical complexity was quantified on an ordinal scale. The relationships of insurance status, clinical complexity, and distance traveled to appointments were quantified by means of statistical analysis. An assessment of barriers to accessing care stratified with regard to insurance status was completed through a survey of primary care physicians and an analysis of both patient arrival rates and operative rates at our tertiary center. Results: Increasing clinical complexity significantly correlated (p < 0.001) with increasing driving distance to the appointment. Patients with Medicaid insurance were significantly less likely (p < 0.001) to present with problems of simple clinical complexity than patients with Medicare and those with private insurance. Primary care physicians reported that 62% of local surgeons accepted patients with Medicaid insurance and 100% of local surgeons accepted patients with private insurance. Forty-four percent of these primary care physicians reported that, if patients who were underinsured (i.e., patients with Medicaid insurance or no insurance) had been refused by community surgeons, they were unable to drive to our tertiary center because of limited personal resources. Patients with Medicaid insurance (26%) were significantly more likely (p < 0.001) to fail to arrive for appointments than patients with private insurance (11%), with no-show rates increasing with the greater distance required to reach the tertiary center. Conclusions: Economically disadvantaged patients face barriers to accessing specialty surgical care. Among patients with Medicaid coverage or no insurance, local surgical care is less likely to be offered and yet personal resources may limit a patient's ability to reach distant centers for non-emergency care.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:2177 / 2184
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Post-Cardiac Surgery Acute Mesenteric Ischemia in a Tertiary Referral Center
    Koudoumas, Dimitrios
    Sharma, Vikas
    Goodwin, Matthew
    Pereira, Sara
    Smego, Douglas
    Ciullo, Anna
    Macedo, Julian
    Tonna, Joseph
    Overton, Sean
    Skaggs, John
    Selzman, Craig
    Glotzbach, Jason
    JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY, 2021, 74 (04) : E336 - E337
  • [22] Measuring access and quality of care indicators in inflammatory bowel disease in a tertiary referral center
    Golovics, P. A.
    Gonczi, L.
    Kurti, Z.
    Lovasz, B. D.
    Gecse, K. B.
    Vegh, Z.
    Lakatos, P. L.
    JOURNAL OF CROHNS & COLITIS, 2017, 11 : S149 - S149
  • [23] Safety and Efficacy of Needle Knife Sphincterotomy for Biliary Access at a Tertiary Care Referral Center
    Thompson, Ashley
    Penn, Natalie C.
    Bartell, Nicholas
    Bittner, Krystle
    Enslin, Sarah
    Ullah, Asad
    Kothari, Truptesh
    Kaul, Vivek
    Kothari, Shivangi
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2020, 115 : S58 - S58
  • [24] Insurance status does not impact surgical outcomes at a large tertiary medical center
    Pfister, A. M.
    Clark, L. H.
    Perrone, N.
    GYNECOLOGIC ONCOLOGY, 2018, 149 : 216 - 217
  • [25] The Status of Fertility Preservation (FP) Insurance Mandates and Their Impact on Utilization and Access to Care
    Sauerbrun-Cutler, May-Tal
    Rollo, Allegra
    Gadson, Alexis
    Eaton, Jennifer L.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2024, 13 (04)
  • [26] Aphasic status epilepticus in a tertiary referral center in Turkey: Clinical features, etiology, and outcome
    Azman, Filiz
    Tezer, F. Irsel
    Saygi, Serap
    EPILEPSY RESEARCH, 2020, 167
  • [27] Long-term survival in patients with status epilepticus: A tertiary referral center study
    Ristic, Aleksandar J.
    Sokic, Dragoslav V.
    Trajkovic, Goran
    Jankovic, Slavko
    Vojvodic, Nikola M.
    Bascarevic, Vladimir
    Popovic, Ljubica M.
    EPILEPSIA, 2010, 51 (01) : 57 - 61
  • [28] Wide-Awake Surgery in Hand Fractures: Experience of a Referral Center of Plastic Surgery in Mexico City
    Navarro Barquin, David
    Chavez Serna, Enrique
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, 2019, 229 (04) : E180 - E180
  • [29] UTILIZATION PATTERNS OF RADIOGRAPHIC IMAGING IN MEN WITH NEWLY DIAGNOSED PROSTATE CANCER AT A TERTIARY REFERRAL CENTER
    Nickles, Samuel
    Rosoff, James
    Tykal, Alisa
    Prasad, Sandip
    Savage, Stephen
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2013, 189 (04): : E844 - E844
  • [30] Utilization of cancer survivorship services during the COVID-19 pandemic in a tertiary referral center
    Oppong, Bridget A.
    Lustberg, Maryam B.
    Nolan, Timiya S.
    Relation, Theresa
    Park, Ko Un
    Healy, Erin
    Trance, Annie
    Klemanski, Dori L.
    JOURNAL OF CANCER SURVIVORSHIP, 2023, 17 (06) : 1708 - 1714