Volume 49 | Number 6 | December 2014

Abstract List

Lauren E. Wisk Ph.D., Ronald Gangnon Ph.D., David J. Vanness Ph.D., Alison A. Galbraith M.D., M.P.H., John Mullahy Ph.D., Whitney P. Witt Ph.D., M.P.H.


Objective

To develop and validate a theoretically based and empirically driven objective measure of financial burden for U.S. families with children.


Data Sources

The measure was developed using 149,021 families with children from the National Health Interview Survey, and it was validated using 18,488 families with children from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey.


Study Design

We estimated the marginal probability of unmet health care need due to cost using a bivariate tensor product spline for family income and out‐of‐pocket health care costs (; e.g., deductibles, copayments), while adjusting for confounders. Recursive partitioning was performed on these probabilities, as a function of income and , to establish thresholds demarcating levels of predicted risk.


Principal Findings

We successfully generated a novel measure of financial burden with four categories that were associated with unmet need (vs. low burden: midlow : 1.93, 95 percent : 1.78–2.09; midhigh : 2.78, 95 percent : 2.49–3.10; high : 4.38, 95 percent : 3.99–4.80). The novel burden measure demonstrated significantly better model fit and less underestimation of financial burden compared to an existing measure (/income ≥10 percent).


Conclusion

The newly developed measure of financial burden establishes thresholds based on different combinations of family income and that can be applied in future studies of health care utilization and expenditures and in policy development and evaluation.