Volume 49 | Number 6 | December 2014

Abstract List

Willi Horner‐Johnson Ph.D., Konrad Dobbertin M.P.H., Jae Chul Lee Ph.D., Elena M. Andresen Ph.D.,


Objective

To examine differences in access to health care and receipt of clinical preventive services by type of disability among working‐age adults with disabilities.


Data Source

Secondary analysis of Medical Expenditure Panel Survey () data from 2002 to 2008.


Study Design

We conducted cross‐sectional logistic regression analyses comparing people with different types of disabilities on health insurance status and type; presence of a usual source of health care; delayed or forgone care; and receipt of dental checkups and cancer screening.


Data Collection

We pooled annualized data files across years. Our analytic sample consisted of adults (18–64 years) with physical, sensory, or cognitive disabilities and nonmissing data for all variables of interest.


Principal Findings

Individuals with hearing impairment had better health care access and receipt than people with other disability types. People with multiple types of limitations were especially likely to have health care access problems and unmet health care needs.


Conclusions

There are differences in health care access and receipt of preventive care depending on what type of disability people have. More in‐depth research is needed to identify specific causes of these disparities and assess interventions to address health care barriers for particular disability groups.