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. 2020 Sep 3;55(Suppl 2):873–882. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.13555

TABLE 2.

Association between Level of Unmet Social Need and Health Care Quality and Access in Low‐Income Adults (2017)

Unadjusted outcomes by number of unmet social needs Adjusted Regression Results
0 1 2‐3 4+ Difference in probability P‐value 95% confidence interval
Check‐up in last 12 mo 78.0% 73.2% 71.3% 65.4%
0 ref ref ref ref
1 −1.4 .094 −2.9 0.2
2‐3 −3.7 <.001 −5.3 −2.2
4+ −7.1 <.001 −9.3 −5.0
Flu shot in last 12 mo 41.7% 35.5% 35.1% 32.7%
0 ref ref ref ref
1 −1.5 .113 −3.4 0.4
2‐3 −2.3 .012 −4.2 −0.5
4+ −5.4 <.001 −7.7 −3.1
Have a personal doctor 80.2% 77.0% 74.3% 74.0%
0 ref ref ref ref
1 −0.7 .311 −2.0 0.7
2‐3 −2.2 .001 −3.5 −0.8
4+ −3.1 <.001 −4.8 −1.4
Inability to see doctor due to cost 9.1% 17.7% 29.8% 43.9%
0 ref ref ref ref
1 7.0 <.001 4.1 9.8
2‐3 17.0 <.001 14.1 19.9
4+ 27.9 <.001 23.7 32.1

N = 19 454 respondents, representing a population of 10.95 million low‐income adults. Adjusted outcomes represent mean marginal effects from our adjusted regression models and are reported as absolute percentage point differences. All regression estimates adjust for age, sex, race/ethnicity, insurance status, self‐rated health status, educational attainment, income‐level, state, and indications for high blood pressure, current smoking status, heavy drinking, poor mental health status, asthma, diabetes, and depression. A difference in probability that is <0 means that the outcome was lesser for those with higher levels of unmet need, as compared to those without reported unmet needs (reference group).

Source: Author calculations from the 2017 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.