To the extent that the asthma morbidity so prevalent in children today is due to underdiagnosis or lack of appropriate treatment, schools are increasingly faced with the issue of defining their role in the care of children with asthma. This paper describes efforts to conduct schoolwide screening for asthma in an inner-city elementary school over the past two years. Screening methodology adopted for the project resulted in a simple and noninvasive approach for identifying children with current asthma in a school setting. While not as medically comprehensive as would be required to conclusively diagnose asthma, the simple screening approach proved efficient in identifying a population of elementary school children with a significant level of asthma morbidity. The paper discusses the effectiveness and feasibility of the screening efforts and proposes how such a screening program might be incorporated into the routine health activities undertaken at any elementary school.
Childhood asthma has reached near-epidemic levels in the US cities. Innovative strategies to identify children with asthma and prevent asthma morbidity are needed. This study measured asthma outcomes after initiation of an inner-city elementary school health center with a schoolwide focus on asthma detection and treatment. The site was an inner-city elementary school in Minneapolis, Minn. The study design incorporated a pre and post comparison with a longitudinal cohort of children (n = 67) and a cross-sectional cohort of children before (n = 156) and after (n = 114) the intervention. Hospitalization rates for asthma decreased 75% to 80% over the study period. Outpatient visits for care in the absence of asthma symptoms doubled (p < .01), and the percentage of students seeing a specialist for asthma increased (p < .01). Use of peak flow meters, use of asthma care plans, and use of inhalers also improved (p < .01). While no change occurred in school absenteeism, parents reported that their children had less awakening with asthma and that asthma was less disruptive to family plans. This schoolwide intervention that included identification of children with asthma, education, family support, and clinical care using an elementary school health center was effective in improving asthma outcomes for children.
Policymakers are increasingly looking toward expanding the role of private insurance in the financing of long-term care. One effort to blend public and private insurance is the Partnership for Long-Term Care sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. This article examines the characteristics of individuals who purchased long-term care insurance through the Partnership for Long-Term Care, as well as their motivation for purchase. Partnership purchasers are found to be a healthier, higher educated, and wealthier group than a comparison group of 55- to 75-year-olds. Partnership purchasers are also more active financial planners, have more self-reliant attitudes, and are more knowledgeable about long-term care. Findings also suggest that the Partnership for Long-Term Care attracts a substantial number of beneficiaries who would not have purchased long-term care insurance in the absence of the Partnership program.
The lack of comprehensive insurance coverage to pay the long-term care expenses for elderly persons is one of our nation's major social problems. Historically, insurance policies sold to those over age sixty-five to supplement their Medicare coverage, while widespread in popularity, have not covered many of the high-cost events that are hard to finance out of income and assets. Instead, they have focused on high-probability but relatively low-cost events. Much of the recent interest in long-term care has been at the state level, where Medicaid budgets support almost half of the nation's longterm care expenditures. 1 Other interest has been shown by state insurance regulators and their nationwide organization, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC), and by insurers themselves, who have greatly increased their participation in the marketplace. 2 The federal government also has become more involved in these issues. The Pepper Commission has outlined a potential federal legislative solution, as has the Health Insurance Association of America. 3 Some of the alternatives under consideration involve public programs organized at the federal level, while others involve private insurance instruments. In this essay, we focus attention on one approach to reform that has received little attention in the published literature but that offers some promise of comprehensive protection against the risk of long-term care without requiring extensive new public expenditures. Under this approach, partnerships would blend private and public insurance in a way that offers comprehensive financial protection. It is not our intent to argue the case for these public/private partnerships; the idea has not yet been demonstrated, so it is difficult to know if this approach is desirable. Rather, our aim here is to describe eight states'
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.