Rimsza Mary E, Butler Richard J, Johnson William G
Center for Health Information and Research, School of Computing and Informatics, Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, Arizona State University, PO Box 874711, Tempe, AZ 85287-4711, USA.
Pediatrics. 2007 May;119(5):e1026-32. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-2747.
The objective of this study was to compare the health care use of children who are covered by public insurance and uninsured children who live in a large urban area and the potential impact of disenrollment on health care use and costs if these children become uninsured.
The 2004 health care transactions for 43,313 uninsured children and 168,722 children who were insured by Medicaid/State Children's Health Insurance Program and living in the Phoenix metropolitan area were analyzed using a community-wide administrative health database (Arizona HealthQuery). Using a multivariate model of health care use by currently uninsured children, we examined the effect of 10% disenrollment of the children who were currently insured by Medicaid/State Children's Health Insurance Program.
A 10% disenrollment would increase the costs of health care in the community by $3,460,398 annually, or $2121 for each child disenrolled. This increase in costs is attributed to a shift of care from ambulatory settings to more expensive emergency departments and an increase in hospital days. We determined that 69% of the change in emergency department visits, 58% of the change in hospital stays, and 74% of the change in ambulatory visits would be attributable to the change in insurance status.
Programmatic changes that result in disenrollment from public insurance programs will increase the number of emergency department visits and hospital days as well as the total community costs of health care. These increases in health care use can be expected to aggravate community problems of emergency department overcrowding and inpatient bed shortages. The majority of the changes in use are attributable to changes in insurance status, which results in a shift of care from less expensive ambulatory settings to emergency departments and increases in hospital days when children lose Medicaid/State Children's Health Insurance Program coverage.
本研究的目的是比较在一个大城市地区参加公共保险的儿童与未参保儿童的医疗保健利用情况,以及如果这些儿童失去保险,退保对医疗保健利用和成本的潜在影响。
使用一个全社区范围的行政健康数据库(亚利桑那州健康查询),分析了2004年居住在凤凰城大都市区的43313名未参保儿童以及168722名参加医疗补助/州儿童健康保险计划的参保儿童的医疗保健交易情况。利用当前未参保儿童医疗保健利用的多变量模型,我们研究了当前参加医疗补助/州儿童健康保险计划的儿童中有10%退保的影响。
10%的退保率将使社区每年的医疗保健成本增加3460398美元,即每名退保儿童增加2121美元。成本的增加归因于医疗服务从门诊机构向更昂贵的急诊科转移以及住院天数的增加。我们确定,急诊科就诊变化的69%、住院天数变化的58%以及门诊就诊变化的74%可归因于保险状况的变化。
导致从公共保险计划退保的计划性变化将增加急诊科就诊次数和住院天数,以及社区医疗保健的总成本。预计这些医疗保健利用的增加将加剧社区急诊科过度拥挤和住院床位短缺的问题。利用情况的大多数变化归因于保险状况的变化,这导致医疗服务从成本较低的门诊机构转向急诊科,并且当儿童失去医疗补助/州儿童健康保险计划覆盖时住院天数增加。