Phillips Charles D, Holan Scott, Sherman Michael, Spector William, Hawes Catherine
School of Rural Public Health, Texas A and M University System of Health Science Center, 3000 Briarcrest Drive, Suite 310, Bryan, TX 77803, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2005 Apr;40(2):373-88. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2005.00362.x.
To provide preliminary data on Medicare expenditures for assisted living facility (ALF) residents and to investigate whether ALF characteristics were related to Medicare expenditures for ALF residents.
DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Data from the National Study of Assisted Living for the Frail Elderly conducted in 1998-1999. This analysis was restricted to the 40 percent of ALFs in that sample that adhered to the assisted living (AL) philosophy by offering more than minimal levels of services and privacy. This study involved the approximately 1,200 residents who remained in an ALF from baseline to follow-up data collection. Six months of postbaseline Medicare claims were acquired for 545 of these residents, who did not differ significantly from the larger sample.
Baseline individual and facility data were collected in personal interviews with residents and a combination of personal and telephone interviews with facility staff. Medicare claims data were acquired from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Cross-sectional analyses using logistic and ordinary least squares regression techniques were used to determine the relationships among individual and facility characteristics and Medicare utilization and expenditures.
On an annualized basis, AL residents incurred Medicare costs of approximately US dollars 4,800. Just less than 15 percent of AL residents accounted for over 75 percent of total Medicare costs. Both the likelihood of utilizing Medicare-covered services and the intensity of service use were largely unaffected by the characteristics of the ALF in which residents lived. Utilization was largely a function of individual characteristics. The only exception to this general finding was that those individuals who utilized services and resided in smaller ALFs had significantly lower average expenditures than did individuals in larger ALFs.
These preliminary data imply that both the level and distribution of Medicare expenditures among ALF residents were similar to those among the general community-dwelling Medicare beneficiary population. No significant relationships were observed between ALF characteristics and Medicare expenditures, except the effect of facility size. This result may imply that how the AL industry eventually defines itself in terms of services and amenities, other than size, may have little impact on Medicare expenditures for ALF residents. However, this is a single, initial study, so caution must be exercised when considering the implications of these results.
提供有关辅助生活设施(ALF)居民医疗保险支出的初步数据,并调查ALF的特征是否与ALF居民的医疗保险支出相关。
数据来源/研究背景:来自1998 - 1999年进行的全国体弱老年人辅助生活研究的数据。该分析仅限于该样本中40%的ALF,这些机构通过提供超过最低水平的服务和隐私来遵循辅助生活(AL)理念。本研究涉及从基线到随访数据收集期间一直留在ALF的约1200名居民。为其中545名居民获取了基线后六个月的医疗保险理赔数据,这些居民与较大样本没有显著差异。
通过与居民进行个人访谈以及与设施工作人员进行个人和电话访谈相结合的方式收集基线个人和设施数据。医疗保险理赔数据从医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心获取。
使用逻辑回归和普通最小二乘法回归技术进行横断面分析,以确定个人和设施特征与医疗保险利用和支出之间的关系。
按年化计算,AL居民的医疗保险费用约为4800美元。不到15%的AL居民占医疗保险总费用的75%以上。居民使用医疗保险覆盖服务的可能性和服务使用强度在很大程度上不受其居住的ALF特征的影响。使用情况在很大程度上是个人特征的函数。这一总体发现的唯一例外是,那些使用服务且居住在较小ALF中的个人的平均支出明显低于居住在较大ALF中的个人。
这些初步数据表明,ALF居民中医疗保险支出的水平和分布与一般社区居住的医疗保险受益人群相似。除了设施规模的影响外,未观察到ALF特征与医疗保险支出之间存在显著关系。这一结果可能意味着,除规模外,AL行业最终如何根据服务和便利设施来定义自身,可能对ALF居民的医疗保险支出影响不大。然而,这是一项单一的初步研究,因此在考虑这些结果的影响时必须谨慎。