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. 2001 Dec;16(12):815–821. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2001.01239.x

Table 4.

Odds Ratio from Logistic Regression Models Predicting Taking New Medi-Cal Managed Care Patients among Physicians Accepting Any New Medi-Cal Patients

Predictor Odds Ratio 95% Confidence Interval
Primary care physicians 1.0
Specialists 0.36 0.22 to 0.61
Age ≤50 y 1.0
Age >50 y 0.89 0.58 to 1.37
Race/ethnicity
 African American 2.75* 1.26 to 6.02
 Asian 1.59 0.92 to 2.72
 Latino 2.33* 1.19 to 4.59
 Other 1.98 0.55 to 7.09
 White 1.0
Female 1.0
Male 1.07 0.57 to 2.00
International medical schol graduate 1.46 0.89 to 2.40
U.S. medical school graduate 1.0
Board certified 1.08 0.63 to 1.85
Not board certified 1.0
Practice setting
 Group model HMO 18.87 4.35 to 83.3
 Group practice 2.11 1.36 to 3.28
 Solo practice 1.0
Income 1.00 0.99 to 1.00
Agree that Medi-Cal patients
 Have complex clinical problems 0.79 0.44 to 1.40
 Have complex psychosocial problems 1.27 0.70 to 2.31
 Are noncompliant 0.67 0.39 to 1.15
 Require extra time 1.47 0.87 to 2.46
 Unsettle other patients in the waiting room 1.34 0.86 to 2.08
 Increase the risk of being sued 0.78 0.50 to 1.21
Agree Medi-Cal managed care is
 Improving Medi-Cal overall 1.78* 1.04 to 3.06
 Increasing reimbursement 1.07 0.59 to 1.95
 Making it easier to obtain tests and consults 0.96 0.57 to 1.62
 Increasing the hassles of caring for Medi-Cal patients 0.93 0.57 to 1.50

* P < .05.

P < .005.

Reference category is those physicians who disagreed with the attitude statement.

Analysis restricted to physicians accepting any new Medi-Cal patients: 42% of primary care physicians, 54% of specialist physicians.