tailieunhanh - 2001 CHILD HEALTH SURVEY An Overview

Most Families Enrolled in Oregon’s Premium Assistance Program Lacked Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance At the time of the study (2002), the Oregon Family Health Insurance Assistance Program (FHIAP) was a State-funded program that provided premium subsidies to families at up to 170 percent of FPL. Oregon’s premium assistance program was unusual in that families who chose to enroll in FHIAP could use the subsidy to purchase employer-sponsored insurance or to buy individual coverage directly from insurers. Seventy percent of FHIAP families did not have access to employer-sponsored health insurance and therefore purchased their coverage in the individual market | Acknowledgements We gratefully acknowledge the expertise and input into the development of this survey from our colleagues in the Curtin University Centre for Developmental Health at the TVW Telethon Institute for Child Health Research Professors Stephen Zubrick and Sven Silburn and Ms Anwen Williams. Citation Daly Alison and Roberts Lynne 2001 Child Health Survey An Overview. Department of Health February 2002. Table of Contents Topic Page About the Survey 2 Health Report Card 3 Disability 5 Development Delays 8 Health Service Utilisation 9 Risk Factors 10 Protective Behaviours 12 Family Life 14 Social Determinants of Health 15 Afterword 17 Endnotes 18 ABOUT THE SURVEY During July and August 2001 996 parents and guardians throughout WA participated in a telephone survey of child health and wellbeing undertaken by the Department of Health Western Australia in collaboration with the Institute of Child Health Research. The survey covered the following topics physical and mental health national health priority areas and other chronic diseases health care utilisation health risk factors health protective factors school performance family functioning demographics. This report the first of a series presents the main findings from the survey. Future releases will include thematic papers exploring information presented in this report in greater detail. There will also be web-based health service report cards and technical papers. The results provide some of the best estimates of child health and wellbeing for the State. The participation rate was 73 . The results can be used to inform health policy planning and purchasing. 2 All data is self-reported. The results are presented as prevalence which means proportion or percentage of the population. The data have been adjusted to the WA Estimated Resident Population when comparing between regions. Differences reported are statistically significant at p .05. Significance was tested using Chi Square analysis t-tests ANOVAs .

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