Adherence with recommended well-child visits has grown, but large gaps persist among various socioeconomic groups
- PMID: 23459729
- DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2012.0691
Adherence with recommended well-child visits has grown, but large gaps persist among various socioeconomic groups
Abstract
A goal of federal policy is to improve preventive health care for children. However, little is known about how adherence to recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics for well-child visits has changed over time. Using the 1996-2008 Medical Expenditure Panel Surveys, we examined trends in adherence and whether differences across population subgroups narrowed or widened over time. We found that the ratio of actual to recommended well-child visits rose from 46.3 percent during the 1996-98 time period to 58.9 percent during the 2007-08 time period. Although this increase in adherence is important, improvement occurred unevenly. We observed large differences in adherence at the start of the study period across income, race or ethnicity, parent education, region, insurance coverage, and having a usual source of care. None of these differences had narrowed significantly by the end of the study period. Indeed, differences widened across parent education, between those with and without insurance coverage, by usual source of care, and between the Northeast and the Midwest and West regions. Our results highlight the importance of provisions in the Affordable Care Act to expand coverage, strengthen incentives for preventive services, and improve the measurement of preventive services.
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