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Resumen de Delays and unmet need for health care among adult primary care patients in a restructured urban public health system.

Allison L. Diamant, Ron D Hays, Leo S. Morales, Wesley Ford, Daphne Calmes, Steven M Asch, Naihua Duan, Eve Fielder, Sehyun Kim, Jonathan E. Fielding, Gerald Sumner, Martin F. Shapiro, David E. Hayes Bautista, Lillian Gelberg

  • Objectives: We estimated the prevalence and determinants of delayed and unmet needs for medical care among patients in a restructured public health system.; Methods: We conducted a stratified cross-sectional probability sample of primary care patients in the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services. Face-to-face interviews were conducted with 1819 adult patients in 6 languages. The response rate was 80%. The study sample was racially/ethnically diverse.; Results: Thirty-three percent reported delaying needed medical care during the preceding 12 months; 25% reported an unmet need for care because of competing priorities; and 46% had either delayed or gone without care.; Conclusions: Barriers to needed health care continue to exist among patients receiving care through a large safety net system. Competing priorities for basic necessities and lack of insurance contribute importantly to unmet health care needs.;


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