Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 155, No. 3, Mar 1997, 1060-1065.
Income level and asthma prevalence and care patterns
D Erzen, KC Carriere, N Dik, C Mustard, LL Roos, J Manfreda and NR Anthonisen
Department of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
Manitoba has a universally accessible health-care system that records
physician contacts and hospitalizations in such a way that they can be
ascribed to individuals. We examined the prevalence of physician- diagnosed
asthma, bronchitis, and airways obstruction (total respiratory morbidity
[TRM]) in Winnipeg in 1988 and 1992, using place of residence to divide
people into quintiles according to average family income. Physician office
visits, hospitalizations, and consultation referrals were each examined.
Three age groups: 0 to 14 yr, 15 to 34 yr, and > or = 35 yr were
studied. The prevalence of TRM was greater in low- than in high-income
quintiles. Asthma prevalence was unrelated to income in the younger age
groups; in the older group asthma was more common in low-income groups, but
was less strongly related to income than was TRM. Asthma prevalence
increased over the years studied, but the increase was not related to
income level. There was some evidence of income-related diagnostic bias in
that low-income patients were more likely to be labeled with a related
diagnosis in addition to asthma than were high-income patients. Low-income
patients had more physician contacts than did high-income patients. In
terms of physician office visits, care continuity did not differ among
income quintiles. Low-income quintiles had more hospitalizations than did
high- income quintiles, and differences were larger than could be accounted
for by diagnostic bias; asthma was probably more severe in low-income
quintiles. High-income quintiles had more consultation referrals than did
low-income quintiles.
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Copyright © 1997 American Thoracic Society
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