Publication | Open Access
Racial and ethnic disparities in prescription coverage and medication use.
108
Citations
25
References
2003
Year
Racial Health EquityHealth Care DisparityHealth DisparitiesSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesDrug CoveragePrescription Drug UseGroup DisparitiesHispanic EthnicityHealth InequalityHispanic HealthHealth InequityPublic HealthRacismHealth Services ResearchVulnerable Patient PopulationHealth Insurance ReformMedication UseHealth PolicyHealth InsurancePharmacoeconomicsHealth EquityNational Health InsuranceHealth EconomicsHealth Care CostMedicineHealth Disparity
This study compared drug coverage and prescription drug use by race and Hispanic ethnicity for Medicare beneficiaries with three chronic conditions: diabetes, hypertension, or heart disease. We found that among beneficiaries without any drug coverage black persons and Hispanics used 10 to 40 percent fewer medications, on average, than white persons with the same illness, and spent up to 60 percent less in total drug costs. Having drug coverage somewhat lessened these differences although the effect was consistent with only M + C prescription benefits. Substantially lower medication use remained for dually eligible black beneficiaries and Hispanics with employer-sponsored drug benefits.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1