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Medical, dental, and optical care utilization among community-living people with spinal cord injury in the United States

Résumé Context/Objective
Information about patterns of healthcare utilization for people living with spinal cord injury (SCI) is currently limited, and this is needed to understand independent community living after SCI. This study investigates self-reported healthcare utilization among community-living people with SCI and assesses disparities across demographic, socioeconomic, and injury-related subgroups.
Setting
6 SCI Model Systems centers in the United States (California, Colorado, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania).
Participants
Adults with chronic, traumatic SCI who were community-living for at least one year after the completion of an inpatient rehabilitation program (N = 617).
Outcome Measures
Utilization of a usual source of 4 types of health care in the past 12 months: primary, SCI, dental, and optical.
Results
84% of participants reported utilizing primary care in the past year. More than half reported utilizing SCI (54%) and dental (57%) care, and 36% reported utilizing optical care. There were no significant differences across key subgroups in the utilization of primary care. Participants who had been injured for 5 years or less and participants with greater educational attainment were more likely to report utilizing SCI care. Participants with higher household income levels were more likely to report using dental care. Female participants and older age groups were more likely to report using optical care.
Conclusion
Rates of healthcare utilization among people with SCI are below recommended rates and vary across demographic, socioeconomic, and injury-related subgroups. This information can inform future research to target barriers to using healthcare services among community-living people with SCI.
AuteursLauren F. Murphy, Thomas N. Bryce, Jennifer Coker, Michael Scott, Mary Joan Roach, Lynn Worobey &Amanda L. Botticello
Titre de revue/journal, volume et numéroThe Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine
Langue de la publication et/ou de traductionAnglais
Année de parution2022
PaysEtats Unis
Institutions affiliéesKessler Foundation, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, Craig Hospital, Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, Case Western Reserve University,
Lien vers la publicationhttps://doi.org/10.1080/10790268.2022.2110817
Type d’accès à la publicationGratuit (résumé seulement)
Mots clésSpinal cord injuries, Healthcare utilization, Dental care, Optical care, Community living
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Précédent Expected outcomes: what you should know a guide for people with T10-L1 spinal cord injury
Prochain Preservation of upper limb function: what you should know a guide for people with spinal cord injury
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