Self-Management and Health Care Use in an Adolescent and Young Adult Medicaid Population With Differing Chronic Illnesses
G. Alexandra Phillips, Nicole Fenton, Sarah Cohen, Karina Javalkar, Maria Ferris

TL;DR
The study found that better self-management among Medicaid recipients with chronic illnesses was linked to higher emergency care use, possibly due to increased healthcare interactions.
Contribution
This study empirically examines the relationship between self-management and healthcare use in adolescents and young adults with chronic illnesses.
Findings
Patients with high self-management had more emergency department visits and hospitalizations.
Better self-management was associated with longer hospital stays.
Healthcare use patterns varied based on factors like age group and diagnosis.
Abstract
Few studies of adults question the validity of the claim that self-management reduces the use of health care services and, as a result, health care costs. The aim of our study was to determine the relationship between self-management and health care use in a population of adolescent and young adult recipients of North Carolina Medicaid with chronic health conditions, who received care in either the pediatric or adult clinic. Our secondary objective was to characterize the patterns of health care use among this same population. One hundred and fifty adolescents or young adults aged 14 to 29 were recruited for this study. Participants completed a demographics questionnaire and the self-management subdomain of the University of North Carolina TRxANSITION Scale. Information on each participant’s emergency department and inpatient use was obtained by using the North Carolina Medicaid…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiabetes Management and Education · Diabetes Management and Education · Diabetes Management and Education
