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Assessing the relationship between measures of healthcare access and functional limitations among individuals with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

Adeyemi, O. J.; Arif, A. A.; Paul, R.

2022-01-05 respiratory medicine
10.1101/2021.12.30.21268572 medRxiv
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ObjectivesFunctional limitation from COPD manifests more from physical rather than respiratory impairment. To what extent health access affects the functional limitation among individuals with COPD is yet to be known. This study aims to assess the relationship between healthcare access and functional limitations among individuals with COPD. Study DesignRetrospective analysis of a cross-sectional population-based survey MethodsThis study pooled 11-year (2008 - 2018) data from the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series - National Health Interview Survey (IPUMS-NHIS). We restricted the data to respondents with self-reported COPD, aged 40 years and older. The independent variables were sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics. The exploratory variables were measures of healthcare access - healthcare coverage, delayed appointment, affordable care, and a usual place for care. The outcome variable was the presence or absence of functional limitations. ResultsThe age, race, educational attainment, marital status, smoking status, and poverty-income ratio had a significant association with functional limitation (p<0.001) We found statistically significant associations between functional limitation and healthcare coverage, delayed appointment, affordable care, and a usual place for care. Poverty modified the relationship between functional limitations and the four measures of healthcare access, with the odds of functional limitation increased among the poor with no healthcare coverage, delayed appointment, unaffordable care, and no usual place for care. ConclusionsA strong relationship exists between the quartet of healthcare coverage, delayed appointment, affordable care, and usual place for care and self-reported functional limitation among individuals with COPD. Poverty was an effect modifier, with the odds of functional limitation worse among the poor.

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