• Title of article

    Family Impacts Among Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder: The Role of Health Care Quality

  • Author/Authors

    Zuckerman، نويسنده , , Katharine E. and Lindly، نويسنده , , Olivia J. and Bethell، نويسنده , , Christina D. and Kuhlthau، نويسنده , , Karen، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    398
  • To page
    407
  • Abstract
    AbstractObjective pare health care quality and family employment and financial impacts among children with special health care needs (CSHCN) with autism spectrum disorder (CSHCN + ASD), CSHCN with functional limitations (CSHCN + FL), and CSHCN lacking these conditions (other CSHCN); to test whether high health care quality was associated with reduced family impacts among CSHCN + ASD. s rom the 2009–2010 National Survey of CSHCN were used to compare 3025 CSHCN + ASD, 6505 CSHCN + FL, and 28,296 other CSHCN. Weighted multivariate logistic regression analyses examined 6 age-relevant, federally defined health care quality indicators and 5 family financial and employment impact indicators. Two composite measures were additionally used: 1) receipt of care that met all age-relevant quality indicators; and 2) had ≥2 of the 5 adverse family impacts. s all health care quality indicators, CSHCN + ASD fared poorly, with only 7.4% meeting all age-relevant indicators. CSHCN + ASD had worse health care quality than other CSHCN, including CSHCN + FL. CSHCN + ASD also had high rates of adverse family impact, with over half experiencing ≥2 adverse impacts. Rates of adverse family impact were higher in CSHCN + ASD than other CSHCN, including CSHCN + FL. Among CSHCN + ASD, those whose health care that met federal quality standards were less likely to have multiple adverse family impacts than CSHCN + ASD whose health care did not meet federal quality standards. sions + ASD are more prone to experience poor health care quality and family impacts than other CSHCN, even CSHCN + FL. Receipt of care meeting federal quality standards may potentially lessen adverse family impacts for CSHCN + ASD.
  • Keywords
    Autism spectrum disorder , delivery of health care , Family Burden , Disabled Children , Family Health , integrated , Quality of Health Care , financial burden , children with special health care needs
  • Journal title
    Academic Pediatrics
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Academic Pediatrics
  • Record number

    1746849