Time to pediatric epilepsy surgery is longer and developmental outcomes lower for government compared with private insurance

Jason S. Hauptman, Andrew Dadour, Taemin Oh, Christine B. Baca, Barbara G. Vickrey, Stefanie Vassar, Raman Sankar, Noriko Salamon, Harry V. Vinters, Gary W. Mathern

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND:: It is unclear if socioeconomic factors like type of insurance influence time to referral and developmental outcomes for pediatric patients undergoing epilepsy surgery. OBJECTIVE:: This study determined whether private compared with state government insurance was associated with shorter intervals of seizure onset to surgery and better developmental quotients for pediatric patients undergoing epilepsy surgery. METHODS:: A consecutive cohort (n = 420) of pediatric patients undergoing epilepsy surgery were retrospectively categorized into those with Medicaid (California Children's Services; n = 91) or private (Preferred Provider Organization, Health Maintenance Organization, Indemnity; n = 329) insurance. Intervals from seizure onset to referral and surgery and Vineland developmental assessments were compared by insurance type with the use of log-rank tests. RESULTS:: Compared with private insurance, children with Medicaid had longer intervals from seizure onset to referral for evaluation (log-rank test, P = .034), and from seizure onset to surgery (P = .017). In a subset (25%) that had Vineland assessments, children with Medicaid compared with private insurance had lower Vineland scores presurgery (P = .042) and postsurgery (P = .003). Type of insurance was not associated with seizure severity, types of operations, etiology, postsurgical seizure-free outcomes, and complication rate. CONCLUSION:: Compared with Medicaid, children with private insurance had shorter intervals from seizure onset to referral and to epilepsy surgery, and this was associated with lower Vineland scores before surgery. These findings may reflect delayed access for uninsured children who eventually obtained state insurance. Reasons for the delay and whether longer intervals before epilepsy surgery affect long-term cognitive and developmental outcomes warrant further prospective investigations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)152-157
Number of pages6
JournalNeurosurgery
Volume73
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Craniotomy
  • Disparities
  • Health inequity
  • Hemispherectomy
  • Socioeconomic

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