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Transportation barriers to health care: assessing the Texas Medicaid program

Transportation is frequently cited as a barrier to health care, but rarely have
researchers analyzed the problems in depth. The purpose of this study was to assess the role
transportation plays in the utilization of preventive health care services among Medicaid
recipients ages 0 - 20 in Texas. This preventive care is known as Early Periodic Screening
and Diagnostic Testing (EPSDT), a comprehensive prevention and treatment program for
Medicaid eligible children.
Our computer assisted telephone interviewing based survey was administered to
Medicaid recipients selected from a representative sample through a stratified sampling
scheme. Binary logistic regression models were used to assess and predict factors associated
with utilization of the Texas Medicaid Transportation Program (MTP) and utilization of
EPSDT. We also used k-means cluster analysis to identify subgroups of Medicaid clients with
particularly acute transportation barriers.
Of the 1,214 Medicaid recipients interviewed, the overall odds of a Medicaid recipient
being a MTP non-user was 0.94. For clients with automobile access, the probability increases
to 0.98. Clients who experienced difficulties paying for gasoline decreased the overall odds to 0.86. When examining utilization of EPSDT, the overall probability of being a low utilizer was
0.59. Two factors, Spanish-speaking patients (0.21) and clients with more than one child at
home (0.54) decreased the overall odds of being a low utilizer, while those with difficulty
paying for gasoline increased the odds of being a low utilizer to 0.63.
Increasing EPSDT utilization among the millions of Texas Medicaid recipients is an
important policy objective. Because the Texas Medicaid population is large and diverse, no
single approach to increasing utilization is likely to address all needs. The group concept
provides a means to understand which Medicaid recipients do not access MTP services and
those with low utilization rates. These groupings can be useful in targeting Medicaid clients
with specific transportation difficulties. Instead of broad informational campaigns, policy
makers should devise targeted strategies to promote the most appropriate types of assistance.
In addition to expanding transportation options, policy makers should also examine the
locations in which care is delivered, considering telemedicine, mobile health and school-based
health clinics as options.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/6016
Date17 September 2007
CreatorsBorders, Stephen Boyce
ContributorsSweeney, Don
PublisherTexas A&M University
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Format799955 bytes, electronic, application/pdf, born digital

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