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Two population-based datasets were used to quantify racial and ethnic differences in perceived need for treatments and services that children with ASD and their families frequently use. Differences in perceived need highlight the importance of understanding cultural and other factors impacting care-seeking behaviors for practitioners recommending evidence-based practices.
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PURPOSE
Caregivers of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) who are from racial or ethnic minority groups experience greater difficulty than non-minority caregivers obtaining care1-5
Differences in service access may not be due solely to healthcare system or provider factors (e.g., availability of providers, sensitivity of providers) but also to parents help-seeking behaviors6-8
Identifying racial and ethnic differences in perceived need for treatment among caregivers of children with ASD will improve understanding of disparities in care seeking
The purpose of this study was to identify differences in caregiver-reported perceived need for treatment services among children with ASD from five racial and ethnic groups in two cross-sectional population-based datasets
METHODS
Data Source: 2005-2006 and the 2009-2010 National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs
(NS-CSHCN) datasets, collected by the CDC, National Center for Health Statistics9,10
Survey responses on the Screening, Household, and Main Interview datasets were combined Sample:
The Main Interview dataset was used to identify children with ASD ages 0-17 years 2005-2006 survey: n= 2123; 2009-2010 survey: n=3055
ASD diagnosis was identified as a Yes response to : To the best of your knowledge, does [child] currently have autism or autism spectrum disorder, that is, an ASD? (2005-06) or Does [child] currently have autism, Aspergers disorder, pervasive developmental disorder (PDD), or other autism spectrum disorder? (2009-10)
Variables: Race and Ethnicity. Five categories were created: 1) white, non-Hispanic; 2) any race,
English-speaking Hispanic; 3) any race, Spanish-speaking Hispanic; 4) black, non-Hispanic; and 5) other race, non-Hispanic.
Perceived Service Need. Six services were examined: 1) specialty physician care; 2) prescription medication; 3) therapy services (OT, PT, ST); 4) child mental health (MH) care; 5) family mental health care; 6) respite care Yes response to In the past 12 months, was there any time when your child needed _
[service]_? Statistical Analysis:
Bivariate methods used to examine row and column independence using Rao-Scott design-based F statistics11,12 to correct for the complex sampling design
Multivariate logistic regressions used to examine the relationship between race/ethnicity and perceived service need after controlling for child and family characteristics
RESULTS
Weighted Bivariate Comparisons of Perceived Need for Services by Race/Ethnicity Category
RESULTS
Adjusted OR and 95% CI of Multivariate Logistic Regression Models Associated with Perceived Need for Services Among Children with ASD
CONCLUSIONS
*The OR differs from 1.00 (p.05); All regressions adjusted for the following covariates: survey year, sample type (cell-phone, landline), child gender, child age, household federal poverty level, annual household out-of-pocket expenses, household urbanicity, childs insurance status, highest level of education in the childs household, and child functional status
FUNDING SOURCE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT & ETHICS APPROVAL
This study was supported by grant R40MC26194-01-02 from the Maternal and Child Health Research Program, Maternal and Child Health Bureau (Title V, Social Security Act), Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health and Human Services, and a Deans Research Award from the Jefferson School of Health Professions, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA
The study was deemed exempt by the first authors institutional review board. For References or Questions, please contact Teal Benevides at
Differences in Perceived Need for Medical, Therapeutic, and Family Support Services Among Caregivers of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder Teal W. Benevides, PhD, MS, OTR/L1; Henry J. Carretta, PhD, MPH2; David S. Mandell, ScD3
1 Thomas Jefferson University, 2 Florida State University, 3 University of Pennsylvania
0
10
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30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Specialty* Prescription Med*
Therapy* Child MH* Family MH Respite*
Un
adju
sted
Per
cen
t
White, Non-Hispanic
Hispanic, English-speaking Hispanic, Spanish-speaking Black, Non-Hispanic
Specialty Physician Prescrip.
Med Therapy Child MH
care Family
MH care Respite
care White,
non-Hispanic (n=3 717)
Ref Ref Ref Ref Ref Ref
Hispanic, English
speaking (n=408)
0.81 [0.57,1.15]
0.44* [0.30,0.64]
1.63* [1.02,2.62]
1.15 [0.79,1.68]
1.24 [0.84,1.83]
0.88 [0.56,1.38]
Hispanic, Spanish
speaking (n=130)
1.54 [0.85,2.80]
0.53* [0.29,1.00]
1.76 [0.85,3.67]
0.98 [0.54,1.78]
0.88 [0.45,1.75]
0.49 [0.23,1.03]
Black, non-Hispanic
(n=418)
0.82 [0.58,1.16]
0.55* [0.39,0.79]
1.68* [1.09,2.59]
0.57* [0.40,0.81]
0.67* [0.45,0.99]
1.14 [0.75,1.74]
Other race, non-Hispanic
(n=442)
0.82 [0.50,1.34]
0.57* [0.37,0.86]
1.02 [0.65,1.58]
0.75 [0.47,1.22]
0.87 [0.58,1.29]
1.24 [0.70,2.19]
*Overall p.05
CONCLUSIONS
Perceived need for certain services is different across various race/ethnic groups, even after adjusting for child and family characteristics.
Practitioners should recognize that caregiver perceptions of need may in turn affect how they prioritize and seek care, independent of their childs specific needs.
Future research should explore the socio-cultural expectations related to race and ethnicity which guide caregiver selection of treatments in order to inform appropriate care models.