Baker Laurence C, Afendulis Christopher
Stanford University School of Medicine, HRP Redwood Building, Rm. 110, Stanford, CA 94305-5405, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2005 Oct;40(5 Pt 1):1466-88. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2005.00427.x.
Many states expanded their Medicaid managed care programs during the 1990s, causing concern about impacts on health care for affected populations. We investigate the relationship between Medicaid managed care enrollment and health care for children. DATA SOURCES AND MEASURES: Repeated cross-sections of Medicaid-covered children under 18 years of age from the 1996/1997 and 1998/1999 Community Tracking Study Household Surveys (n=2,602) matched to state-year CMS Medicaid managed care enrollment data. For each individual, we constructed measures of health care utilization (provider and emergency department visits, hospitalizations, surgeries); health care access (usual source of care, unmet medical needs, put-off needed care); and satisfaction (satisfaction overall, with doctor choice, and with last visit).
Regression analysis of the relationship between within-state changes in Medicaid managed care enrollment rates and changes in mean utilization, access, and satisfaction measures for children covered by Medicaid, controlling for a range of potentially confounding factors.
Increases in Medicaid health maintenance organization (HMO) enrollment are associated with less emergency room use, more outpatient visits, fewer hospitalizations, higher rates of reporting having put off care, and lower satisfaction with the most recent visit. Medicaid primary care case management (PCCM) plans are associated with increases in outpatient visits, but also with higher rates of reporting unmet medical needs, putting off care, and having no usual source of care.
Both Medicaid HMO and PCCM plans can have important impacts on health care utilization, access, and satisfaction. Some impacts may be positive (e.g., less ED use and more outpatient provider use), although concern about increasing challenges in access to care and satisfaction is also warranted.
20世纪90年代,许多州扩大了其医疗补助管理式医疗计划,这引发了对受影响人群医疗保健影响的担忧。我们研究了医疗补助管理式医疗参保与儿童医疗保健之间的关系。
来自1996/1997年和1998/1999年社区追踪研究家庭调查的18岁以下参加医疗补助儿童的重复横截面数据(n = 2602),并与州年度医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)医疗补助管理式医疗参保数据相匹配。对于每个个体,我们构建了医疗保健利用指标(就诊医生和急诊科次数、住院次数、手术次数);医疗保健可及性指标(通常的医疗服务来源、未满足的医疗需求、推迟所需护理);以及满意度指标(总体满意度、对医生选择的满意度、对上次就诊的满意度)。
对医疗补助管理式医疗参保率的州内变化与医疗补助覆盖儿童的平均利用、可及性和满意度指标变化之间的关系进行回归分析,控制一系列潜在的混杂因素。
医疗补助健康维护组织(HMO)参保人数的增加与急诊室使用减少、门诊就诊增加、住院次数减少、报告推迟护理的比例升高以及对最近一次就诊的满意度降低有关。医疗补助初级保健病例管理(PCCM)计划与门诊就诊增加有关,但也与报告未满足医疗需求、推迟护理以及没有固定医疗服务来源的比例升高有关。
医疗补助HMO和PCCM计划都可能对医疗保健利用、可及性和满意度产生重要影响。一些影响可能是积极的(例如,急诊室使用减少和门诊医疗服务提供者使用增加),不过对获得医疗服务和满意度方面日益增加的挑战也应予以关注。