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Journal Article

Does Identification of Previously Undiagnosed Conditions Change Care Seeking Behavior?

Press Contact: Jason Millman (213)-821-0099

In-home assessments increased doctor visits for newly diagnosed conditions, yet patients without established provider were less likely to seek care.

Rebecca M. Myerson, Lisandro D. Colantonio, Monika M. Safford, and Elbert S. Huang find that in-home assessments for high cholesterol, hypertension, and diabetes among previously undiagnosed Medicare beneficiaries spurred a 22 percentage point increase in regular doctor visits for care, with the biggest increase for those found to have diabetes. The authors found no significant differences in care-seeking behavior among those newly diagnosed by gender, race, Medicaid eligibility, income, marital status, or living in a Health Provider Shortage Area; yet, patients without established providers were less likely to visit the doctor for care. Beneficiaries with undiagnosed illnesses at the point of assessment were more likely to both lack a routine provider and have higher blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, total and LDL cholesterol, and lower HDL cholesterol than those previously diagnosed. These findings highlight the impact in-home assessments can have on care-seeking behaviors, as well as underscore the need for new ways to engage hard-to-reach beneficiaries.

The full study is available at Health Services Research. The press release for the study is available here

Citation: Myerson, R. M., Colantonio, L. D., Safford, M. M., & Huang, E. S. (2018). Does Identification of Previously Undiagnosed Conditions Change Care‐Seeking Behavior?. Health services research53(3), 1517-1538.