Relationship Between Health Care Costs and Very Low Literacy Skills in a Medically Needy and Indigent Medicaid Population 论文

2004The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine引用 221
Health Literacy and Information AccessibilityReading and Literacy DevelopmentText Readability and Simplification

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine
发表日期
2004-01-01
发表年份
2004

关键词

Health Literacy and Information AccessibilityReading and Literacy DevelopmentText Readability and Simplification

摘要

OBJECTIVES: Previous research established that low literacy is independently associated with poorer health. Our objective was to determine whether low literacy skill also is associated with higher health care charges. METHODS: We studied persons enrolled in Medicaid because of medical need/indigence by testing literacy skills in English or Spanish and measuring annual health care charges. Statistical analyses determined if, after adjusting for sociodemographic variables, literacy was associated with charges. RESULTS: Mean charges among subjects with very low literacy skills (< or =3rd-grade reading level) were 10,688 dollars/year, but only 2,891 dollars for those with better literacy skills (> or =4th-grade reading level), statistically significant difference (P =.025). This difference persisted after adjustment for potentially confounding sociodemographic variables. CONCLUSIONS: Based on this small study, very limited reading skills seem to be independently associated with higher health care charges among medically needy and medically indigent Medicaid patients.

相关技术

暂无数据

相关事件

暂无数据

相关文章

暂无数据