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. 2003 Sep-Oct;3(5):263-9.
doi: 10.1367/1539-4409(2003)003<0263:tiotis>2.0.co;2.

The impact of the Iowa S-SCHIP program on access, health status, and the family environment

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The impact of the Iowa S-SCHIP program on access, health status, and the family environment

Peter C Damiano et al. Ambul Pediatr. 2003 Sep-Oct.

Abstract

Objectives: To determine the effect of the Iowa Separate State Child Health Insurance Program (S-SCHIP) on need for services, utilization and access to care, child health status, and the family environment.

Methodology: A longitudinal pretest-posttest panel survey was used to evaluate differences in children's access to health care, health status, and family environment at the beginning of the program and after 1 year. Written surveys with telephone follow-up calls were used to collect the data. Pre- and postquestionnaire results for 463 children were matched and compared using the McNemar test for correlated proportions and the Wilcoxon signed rank test. Approximately 71% of families responded to both surveys.

Principal findings: Similar rates of perceived need for each of 6 service areas were found after being in the program for a year as before. Unmet need was significantly reduced among those needing services: medical care (27% before, 6% after), specialty care (40% before, 13% after), dental care (30% before, 10% after), vision care (46% before, 12% after), behavioral and emotional care (42% before, 18% after), and prescription medications (21% before, 13% after). Overall health status was rated significantly better (ie, excellent: 37% before, 42% after). Ninety-five percent of families reported a reduction in family stress, and there was significantly less worry about the ability to pay for their child's health care (92% before, 57% after). The activities of fewer children were limited because of potential health care costs.

Conclusions: The Iowa S-SCHIP program improved access to care and the family environment for children enrolled during the first year without a change in perceived need for services.

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