Berkowitz Seth A, Seligman Hilary K, Rigdon Joseph, Meigs James B, Basu Sanjay
Division of General Internal Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
Diabetes Population Health Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.
JAMA Intern Med. 2017 Nov 1;177(11):1642-1649. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.4841.
Food insecurity is associated with high health care expenditures, but the effectiveness of food insecurity interventions on health care costs is unknown.
To determine whether the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which addresses food insecurity, can reduce health care expenditures.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This is a retrospective cohort study of 4447 noninstitutionalized adults with income below 200% of the federal poverty threshold who participated in the 2011 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the 2012-2013 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS).
Self-reported SNAP participation in 2011.
Total health care expenditures (all paid claims and out-of-pocket costs) in the 2012-2013 period. To test whether SNAP participation was associated with lower subsequent health care expenditures, we used generalized linear modeling (gamma distribution, log link, with survey design information), adjusting for demographics (age, gender, race/ethnicity), socioeconomic factors (income, education, Social Security Disability Insurance disability, urban/rural), census region, health insurance, and self-reported medical conditions. We also conducted sensitivity analyses as a robustness check for these modeling assumptions.
A total of 4447 participants (2567 women and 1880 men) were enrolled in the study, mean (SE) age, 42.7 (0.5) years; 1889 were SNAP participants, and 2558 were not. Compared with other low-income adults, SNAP participants were younger (mean [SE] age, 40.3 [0.6] vs 44.1 [0.7] years), more likely to have public insurance or be uninsured (84.9% vs 67.7%), and more likely to be disabled (24.2% vs 10.6%) (P < .001 for all). In age- and gender-adjusted models, health care expenditures between those who did and did not participate in SNAP were similar (difference, $34; 95% CI, -$1097 to $1165). In fully adjusted models, SNAP was associated with lower estimated annual health care expenditures (-$1409; 95% CI, -$2694 to -$125). Sensitivity analyses were consistent with these results, also indicating that SNAP participation was associated with significantly lower estimated expenditures.
SNAP enrollment is associated with reduced health care spending among low-income American adults, a finding consistent across several analytic approaches. Encouraging SNAP enrollment among eligible adults may help reduce health care costs in the United States.
粮食不安全与高额医疗保健支出相关,但粮食不安全干预措施对医疗保健成本的有效性尚不清楚。
确定解决粮食不安全问题的补充营养援助计划(SNAP)是否能降低医疗保健支出。
设计、背景和参与者:这是一项回顾性队列研究,研究对象为4447名收入低于联邦贫困线200%的非机构化成年人,他们参与了2011年全国健康访谈调查(NHIS)和2012 - 2013年医疗支出小组调查(MEPS)。
2011年自我报告的SNAP参与情况。
2012 - 2013年期间的总医疗保健支出(所有已支付的索赔和自付费用)。为了检验SNAP参与是否与随后较低的医疗保健支出相关,我们使用了广义线性模型(伽马分布,对数链接,结合调查设计信息),对人口统计学特征(年龄、性别、种族/族裔)、社会经济因素(收入、教育程度、社会保障残疾保险残疾状况、城乡)、人口普查区域、医疗保险和自我报告的医疗状况进行了调整。我们还进行了敏感性分析,作为对这些建模假设的稳健性检验。
共有4447名参与者(2567名女性和1880名男性)纳入研究,平均(标准误)年龄为42.7(0.5)岁;1889名是SNAP参与者,2558名不是。与其他低收入成年人相比,SNAP参与者更年轻(平均[标准误]年龄,40.3[0.6]岁对44.1[0.7]岁),更有可能拥有公共保险或未参保(84.9%对67.7%),且更有可能残疾(24.2%对10.6%)(所有P值均<0.001)。在年龄和性别调整模型中,参与和未参与SNAP的人群之间的医疗保健支出相似(差异为34美元;95%置信区间,-1097美元至1165美元)。在完全调整模型中,SNAP与估计的年度医疗保健支出较低相关(-1409美元;95%置信区间,-2694美元至-125美元)。敏感性分析与这些结果一致,也表明SNAP参与与估计支出显著降低相关。
在美国低收入成年人中,参与SNAP与医疗保健支出减少相关,这一发现通过多种分析方法得到了一致验证。鼓励符合条件的成年人参与SNAP可能有助于降低美国的医疗保健成本。