Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2966192 Journal of Clinical Lipidology 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundAcross the United States, hyperlipidemia remains inadequately controlled and may vary across states according to differences in health insurance coverage and/or race/ethnicity.ObjectiveTo examine relationships between states' health insurance and race/ethnicity characteristics with measures of hyperlipidemia management across the 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia.MethodsCross-validated, multiple linear regression modeling was used to analyze associations between states' health insurance patterns or proportions of racial minorities (from the 2010 U.S. Census data) and states' aggregate frequency of checking cholesterol within the previous 5 years or prescriptions written for lipid-lowering medications (from national survey and population-adjusted retail prescription data, respectively), with adjustments for age, sex, body mass index, race/ethnicity, and poverty.ResultsIn states with proportionately more uninsured, cholesterol levels are checked less often, but in states with proportionately more private, Medicare, or Medicaid coverage, providers are not necessarily more likely to check cholesterol or to write more prescriptions. In states with proportionately more African-Americans and/or Hispanics, cholesterol is more likely to be checked, but in states with more African-Americans, more prescriptions were written, whereas in states with more Hispanics, fewer statin prescriptions were written.ConclusionVariations across states in insurance and racial/ethnicity mix are associated with variations in hyperlipidemia management; less-insured states may be less effective whereas states with more private, Medicare, or Medicaid coverage may not be more effective. In states with proportionately more African-Americans vs. Hispanics, lipid medications may be prescribed differently. Our findings warrant further investigations.

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