First published online as a Review in Advance on September 8, 2005PREVENTIVE CARE FOR CHILDREN IN THE UNITED STATES: Quality and Barriers
Paul J. Chung,1,2 Tim C. Lee,1 Janina L. Morrison,2 and Mark A. Schuster1,2,3,41Department of Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095; email:
paulchung@mednet.ucla.edu 2University of California, Los Angeles/RAND Prevention Research Center, Los Angeles, California 90024
3RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, California 90401
4Department of Health Services, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095
▪ Abstract Our objective was to examine the academic literature covering quality of childhood preventive care in the United States and to identify barriers that contribute to poor or disparate quality. We systematically reviewed articles related to childhood preventive care published from 1994 through 2003, focusing on 58 large observational studies and interventions addressing well-child visit frequency, developmental and psychosocial surveillance, disease screening, and anticipatory guidance. Although many children attend recommended well-child visits and receive comprehensive preventive care at those visits, many do not attend such visits. Estimates of children who attend all recommended visits range widely (from 37%–81%). In most studies, less than half is the proportion of children who receive developmental or psychosocial surveillance, adolescents who are asked about various health risks, children at risk for lead exposure who are screened, adolescents at risk for Chlamydia who are tested, or children and adolescents who receive anticipatory guidance on various topics. Major barriers include lack of insurance, lack of continuity with a clinician or place of care, lack of privacy for adolescents, lack of clinician awareness or skill, racial/ethnic barriers, language-related barriers, clinician and patient gender-related barriers, and lack of time. In summary, childhood preventive care quality is mixed, with large disparities among populations. Recent research has identified barriers that might be overcome through practice and policy interventions.
An Urban School Based Comparative Study of Experiences and Perceptions Differentiating Public Health Insurance Eligible Immigrant Families with and without Coverage for their Children
Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health (2008)
Parental Beliefs and Children's Receipt of Preventive Care: Another Piece of the Puzzle?
Health Services Research 0(0):070723134635001-??? (2007)