Hazelton Patrick T, Steward Wayne T, Collins Shane P, Gaffney Stuart, Morin Stephen F, Arnold Emily A
Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 5;9(3):e90306. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090306. eCollection 2014.
In preparation for full Affordable Care Act implementation, California has instituted two healthcare initiatives that provide comprehensive coverage for previously uninsured or underinsured individuals. For many people living with HIV, this has required transition either from the HIV-specific coverage of the Ryan White program to the more comprehensive coverage provided by the county-run Low-Income Health Programs or from Medicaid fee-for-service to Medicaid managed care. Patient advocates have expressed concern that these transitions may present implementation challenges that will need to be addressed if ambitious HIV prevention and treatment goals are to be achieved.
30 semi-structured, in-depth interviews were conducted between October, 2012, and February, 2013, with policymakers and providers in 10 urban, suburban, and rural California counties. Interview topics included: continuity of patient care, capacity to handle payer source transitions, and preparations for healthcare reform implementation. Study team members reviewed interview transcripts to produce emergent themes, develop a codebook, build inter-rater reliability, and conduct analyses.
Respondents supported the goals of the ACA, but reported clinic and policy-level challenges to maintaining patient continuity of care during the payer source transitions. They also identified strategies for addressing these challenges. Areas of focus included: gaps in communication to reach patients and develop partnerships between providers and policymakers, perceived inadequacy in new provider networks for delivering quality HIV care, the potential for clinics to become financially insolvent due to lower reimbursement rates, and increased administrative burdens for clinic staff and patients.
California's new healthcare initiatives represent ambitious attempts to expand and improve health coverage for low-income individuals. The state's challenges in maintaining quality care and treatment for people living with HIV experiencing these transitions demonstrate the importance of setting effective policies in anticipation of full ACA implementation in 2014.
为全面实施《平价医疗法案》做准备,加利福尼亚州推行了两项医疗保健计划,为之前未参保或参保不足的个人提供全面保险。对于许多感染艾滋病毒的人来说,这意味着要从瑞安·怀特计划提供的针对艾滋病毒的保险过渡到由县运营的低收入健康计划提供的更全面的保险,或者从医疗补助按服务收费模式过渡到医疗补助管理式医疗模式。患者权益倡导者担心,这些过渡可能带来实施方面的挑战,如果要实现宏伟的艾滋病毒预防和治疗目标,就需要加以解决。
2012年10月至2013年2月期间,对加利福尼亚州10个城市、郊区和农村县的政策制定者和医疗服务提供者进行了30次半结构化深入访谈。访谈主题包括:患者护理的连续性、应对付款人来源转变的能力以及医疗改革实施的准备情况。研究团队成员审查访谈记录,以提炼出浮现的主题、制定编码手册、建立评分者间信度并进行分析。
受访者支持《平价医疗法案》的目标,但报告了在付款人来源转变期间维持患者护理连续性方面存在的诊所和政策层面的挑战。他们还确定了应对这些挑战的策略。关注领域包括:与患者沟通及在医疗服务提供者和政策制定者之间建立伙伴关系方面的差距、新的医疗服务提供者网络在提供优质艾滋病毒护理方面被认为存在不足、诊所可能因报销率降低而出现财务破产以及诊所工作人员和患者的行政负担增加。
加利福尼亚州新的医疗保健计划是扩大和改善低收入人群医疗覆盖范围的大胆尝试。该州在为经历这些转变的艾滋病毒感染者维持优质护理和治疗方面面临的挑战表明,在预期2014年全面实施《平价医疗法案》之际制定有效政策的重要性。