Children with neurodevelopmental disorders and disabilities: a population-based study of healthcare service utilization using administrative data
- PMID: 28905997
- DOI: 10.1111/dmcn.13557
Children with neurodevelopmental disorders and disabilities: a population-based study of healthcare service utilization using administrative data
Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to identify children with neurodevelopmental disorders and disabilities (NDD/D) and compare their healthcare service utilization to children without NDD/D using provincial linked administrative data.
Method: The sample included children aged 6 to 10 years (n=183 041), who were registered with the British Columbia Medical Services Plan. Diagnostic information was used for the identification and classification of NDD/D in six functional domains. Healthcare service utilization included outcomes based on physician claims, prescription medication use, and hospitalization.
Results: Overall, 8.3% of children were identified with NDD/D. Children with NDD/D had higher healthcare service utilization rates than those without NDD/D. Effect sizes were: very large for the number of days a prescription medication was dispensed; large for the number of prescriptions; medium for the number of physician visits, different specialists visited, number of different prescription medications, and ever hospitalized; and small for the number of laboratory visits, X-ray visits, and number of days hospitalized.
Interpretation: The findings have policy implications for service and resource planning. Given the high use of psychostimulants, specialized services for both NDD/D and psychiatric conditions may be the most needed services for children with NDD/D. Future studies may examine patterns of physician behaviours and costs attributable to healthcare service utilization for children with NDD/D.
What this paper adds: Children with neurodevelopmental disorders and disabilities (NDD/D) have higher healthcare service utilization than those without. Based on provincial population-based linked administrative health data, a sizeable number of children are living with NDD/D. Given the high use of psychostimulants, specialized services for children with both NDD/D and psychiatric conditions may be the most needed services for children with NDD/D.
© 2017 Mac Keith Press.
Comment in
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Access to early diagnostics, intervention, and support for children with a neurobiological developmental delay or disorder.Dev Med Child Neurol. 2017 Dec;59(12):1215-1216. doi: 10.1111/dmcn.13583. Epub 2017 Sep 25. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2017. PMID: 28944462 No abstract available.
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