Prevalence of Children Aged 3-17 Years With Developmental Disabilities, by Urbanicity: United States, 2015-2018.

Q2 Medicine National health statistics reports Pub Date : 2020-02-01
Benjamin Zablotsky, Lindsey I Black
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Abstract

Objective-This report examines the prevalence of developmental disabilities among children in both rural and urban areas as well as service utilization among children with developmental issues in both areas. Methods-Data from the 2015-2018 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) were used to examine the prevalence of 10 parent- or guardian-reported developmental disability diagnoses (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [ADHD], autism spectrum disorder, blindness, cerebral palsy, moderate to profound hearing loss, learning disability, intellectual disability, seizures, stuttering or stammering, and other developmental delays) and service utilization for their child. Prevalence estimates are presented by urbanicity of residence (urban or rural). Bivariate logistic regressions were used to test for differences by urbanicity. Results-Children living in rural areas were more likely to be diagnosed with a developmental disability than children living in urban areas (19.8% compared with 17.4%). Specifically, children living in rural areas were more likely than those in urban areas to be diagnosed with ADHD (11.4% compared with 9.2%) and cerebral palsy (0.5% compared with 0.2%). However, among children with a developmental disability, children living in rural areas were significantly less likely to have seen a mental health professional, therapist, or had a well-child checkup visit in the past year, compared with children living in urban areas. Children with a developmental disability living in rural areas were also significantly less likely to receive Special Educational or Early Intervention Services compared with those living in urban areas. Conclusion-Findings from this study highlight differences in the prevalence of developmental disabilities and use of services related to developmental disabilities by rural and urban residence.

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3-17岁发育性残疾儿童患病率,按城市划分:美国,2015-2018。
目的:本报告调查了农村和城市地区儿童发育障碍的患病率,以及这两个地区有发育问题的儿童对服务的利用情况。方法:使用2015-2018年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)的数据,研究10例父母或监护人报告的发育障碍诊断(注意力缺陷/多动障碍[ADHD]、自闭症谱系障碍、失明、脑瘫、中度至重度听力损失、学习障碍、智力障碍、癫痫发作、口吃或口吃以及其他发育迟缓)的患病率和儿童对服务的利用情况。患病率估计是根据居住地的城市化程度(城市或农村)提出的。采用双变量逻辑回归来检验城市化程度的差异。结果:农村儿童被诊断为发育障碍的可能性高于城市儿童(19.8%比17.4%)。具体来说,生活在农村地区的儿童比城市地区的儿童更容易被诊断为多动症(11.4%比9.2%)和脑瘫(0.5%比0.2%)。然而,在患有发育障碍的儿童中,与生活在城市地区的儿童相比,生活在农村地区的儿童在过去一年中看到心理健康专业人员、治疗师或进行健康检查的可能性要低得多。与生活在城市地区的儿童相比,生活在农村地区的发育障碍儿童接受特殊教育或早期干预服务的可能性也明显较低。结论:本研究的发现突出了城乡居民在发育性残疾患病率和使用发育性残疾相关服务方面的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
National health statistics reports
National health statistics reports Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Notice: Effective January 2008 the title, National Health Statistics Reports (NHSR), replaces Advance Data from Vital and Health Statistics (AD). NHSRs will be numbered sequentially beginning with 1. The last AD report number is 395. These reports provide annual data summaries, present analyses of health topics, or present new information on methods or measurement issues.
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