Protocol - Affordability Problems in Accessing Prescriptions
- Access to Health Services
- Affordability Problems in Accessing Dental Care
- Health Insurance Coverage
- Quality of Care - Adults
- Quality of Care - Children
Description
The MEPS-HC is an interview-administered questionnaire that collects information on health and health care at the household level. This protocol identifies whether each household member has a medical provider who provides the usual source of care, reasons why members without a usual source of care do not have one, aspects of satisfaction with usual care providers, and problems a household may have experienced in obtaining needed health care.
Specific Instructions
The household must first be enumerated to identify whether the household is a single-person or multi-person response unit (RU). The Working Group recommends ascertaining the relationships between the RU members rather than asking for the full names of RU members. Investigators should collect the relationship of the household member to the respondent, as described in Household Roster-Relationships (11402).
Availability
Protocol
- ‘MONTH YEAR-1’ = the month of the current interview and the current interview year minus 1.
[SINGLE-PERSON RU/MULTI-PERSON RU] Please think about the last 12 months, that is, between {MONTH YEAR-1} and today. {{Have you/Has{PERSON}} delayed getting prescription medicines} because of worry about the cost?
[ ] Yes
[ ] No
[ ] Refused
[ ] Don’t know
- [Ask if 1 = YES and a MULTI-PERSON RU] Who was that?
PROBE: Did anyone else delay getting prescription medicines because of worry about the cost?
ENTER ALL THAT APPLY.
Full Name 1: __________________
Full Name 2: __________________
Full Name 3: __________________
Full Name 4: __________________
Full Name 5: __________________
- [Ask if 1 = NO, REFUSED, or DONT KNOW] [SINGLE-PERSON RU/ MULTI-PERSON RU] In the last 12 months, was there any time when {{you/{PERSON}}/anyone in the household} needed prescription medicines, but did not get them because {{you/he/she}/they} couldn’t afford it?
[ ] Yes
[ ] No
[ ] Refused
[ ] Don’t know
- [Ask if 3 = YES and a MULTI-PERSON RU] Who was that?
PROBE: Did anyone else need prescription medicines but did not get it because they couldn’t afford it?
ENTER ALL THAT APPLY.
Full Name 1: __________________
Full Name 2: __________________
Full Name 3: __________________
Full Name 4: __________________
Full Name 5: __________________
Personnel and Training Required
The interviewer must be trained to conduct personal interviews with individuals from the general population. The interviewer must be trained and found to be competent (i.e., tested by an expert) at the completion of personal interviews. The interviewer should be trained to prompt respondents further if a “don’t know” response is provided.
Equipment Needs
The PhenX Working Group acknowledges these questions can be administered in a computerized or noncomputerized format (i.e., paper-and-pencil instrument). Computer software is necessary to develop computer-assisted instruments. The interviewer will require a laptop computer/handheld computer to administer a computer-assisted questionnaire.
Requirements
Requirement Category | Required |
---|---|
Major equipment | No |
Specialized training | No |
Specialized requirements for biospecimen collection | No |
Average time of greater than 15 minutes in an unaffected individual | No |
Mode of Administration
Interviewer-administered questionnaire
Lifestage
Adult
Participants
Adults aged 18 years or older
Selection Rationale
The Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component (MEPS-HC) is a validated, widely used tool that assesses a household’s usual source of care and other aspects of access to health care.
Language
English, Other languages available at source
Standards
Standard | Name | ID | Source |
---|
Derived Variables
None
Process and Review
Not Applicable
Protocol Name from Source
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component (MEPS-HC)
Source
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Household Component (MEPS-HC), 2020, Access to Care (AC) section, items AC290 (AC1193), AC300 (AC1194), AC310 (AC1195), AC320 (AC1196)
General References
Cohen, S. B., & Cohen, J. W. (2013). The capacity of the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey to inform the Affordable Care Act. Inquiry, 50(2), 124-134. https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958013513678
Kirkland, E. B., Heincelman, M., Bishu, K. G., Schumann, S. O., Schreiner, A., Axon, R. N., Mauldin, P. D., & Moran, W. P. (2018). trends in healthcare expenditures among US adults with hypertension: national estimates, 2003-2014. Journal of the American Heart Association, 7(11), e008731. https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.118.008731
Stransky M. L. (2018). Unmet needs for care and medications, cost as a reason for unmet needs, and unmet needs as a big problem, due to health-care provider (dis)continuity. Journal of patient experience, 5(4), 258-266. https://doi.org/10.1177/2374373518755499
Protocol ID
280801
Variables
Export VariablesVariable Name | Variable ID | Variable Description | dbGaP Mapping | |
---|---|---|---|---|
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Delay_Cost | ||||
PX280801010000 | Please think about the last 12 months, that more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Delay_Cost_Who_1 | ||||
PX280801020100 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else delay more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Delay_Cost_Who_2 | ||||
PX280801020200 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else delay more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Delay_Cost_Who_3 | ||||
PX280801020300 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else delay more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Delay_Cost_Who_4 | ||||
PX280801020400 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else delay more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Delay_Cost_Who_5 | ||||
PX280801020500 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else delay more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Not_Afford | ||||
PX280801030000 | In the last 12 months, was there any time more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Not_Afford_Who_1 | ||||
PX280801040100 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else need more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Not_Afford_Who_2 | ||||
PX280801040200 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else need more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Not_Afford_Who_3 | ||||
PX280801040300 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else need more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Not_Afford_Who_4 | ||||
PX280801040400 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else need more | N/A | ||
PX280801_Affordability_Problems_Access_Prescriptions_Not_Afford_Who_5 | ||||
PX280801040500 | Who was that? PROBE: Did anyone else need more | N/A |
Measure Name
Affordability Problems in Accessing Prescriptions
Release Date
December 14, 2022
Definition
Affordability of prescriptions affects whether individuals and their household members have access to care.
Purpose
To assess delays in seeking prescription refills due to cost. Delayed access to preventive medications can negatively impact health.
Keywords
Access, health care, services, Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, MEPS, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, AHRQ, usual source of care, barriers, prescriptions, household, medical provider, accessibility, availability, Access to Health Care
Measure Protocols
Protocol ID | Protocol Name |
---|---|
280801 | Affordability Problems in Accessing Prescriptions |
Publications
Burnett-Bowie, S. A. M., et al. (2024) The American Society for Bone and Mineral Research Task Force on clinical algorithms for fracture risk report. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research. 2024 May; 39(5): 517-530. doi: 10.1093/jbmr/zjae048
Bartholomew, T. S., et al. (2024) Project CHARIOT: study protocol for a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation study of comprehensive tele-harm reduction for engagement of people who inject drugs in HIV prevention services Addiction Science & Clinical Practice. 2024 March; 19(1). doi: 10.1186/s13722-024-00447-9