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PEDIATRICS Vol. 113 No. 4 April 2004, pp. e276-e282


ELECTRONIC ARTICLE

Access to Care for Children of Migratory Agricultural Workers: Factors Associated With Unmet Need for Medical Care

Andrea Weathers, MD, DrPH*, Cynthia Minkovitz, MD, MPP{ddagger}, Patricia O’Campo, PhD{ddagger} and Marie Diener-West, PhD§

* Department of Maternal and Child Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
{ddagger} Departments of Population and Family Health Sciences
§ Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland

Objective. To assess the correlates of unmet need for medical care among migrant children.

Design and Setting. A cross-sectional household survey used multistage sampling to identify migrant families in eastern North Carolina.

Participants. Three hundred adult caretakers of 1 (per household) randomly selected child <13 years old.

Results. Fifty-three percent of the children had an unmet medical need. The most common reasons for unmet medical need were lack of transportation (80%) and lack of knowledge of where to go for care (20%). Unmet medical need was associated inversely with less than very good health (odds ratio [OR]: 0.31; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.16–0.61) and less than high school caretaker education (OR: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.39–0.98) and was associated directly with 1) having bed-days due to illness (OR: 2.46; 95% CI: 1.42–4.26), 2) lacking an annual well examination (OR:1.89; 95% CI: 1.12–3.20), 3) transportation dependence (OR:1.97; 95% CI: 1.24–3.13), 4) female gender (OR: 1.69; 95% CI: 1.07–2.67), 5) preschool age (OR: 2.24; 95% CI: 1.28–3.92), and 6) very high caretaker work pressure (OR: 5.01; 95% CI: 2.98–8.42). Adjustment using multiple logistic regression reveals unmet medical need to be independently associated with preschool age (OR: 2.08; 95% CI: 1.05–4.13) and very high caretaker pressure to work (OR: 5.93; 95% CI: 3.24–10.85). Of sampled children, 27% were preschool aged, and 40% had caretakers categorized with high work pressure.

Conclusions. Medical-access barriers among migrant children are largely nonfinancial. Preschool-aged migrant children disproportionately experience unmet medical need. Decreasing forgone care among migrant children will likely require a combination of individual, health-system, and labor-policy modifications.


Key Words: transients • migrants • health services needs and demand • health-services accessibility • Hispanic Americans • child

Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio • WIC, Women, Infants, and Children • CI, confidence interval


Received for publication Nov 15, 2003; Accepted Dec 1, 2003.


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