Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon
Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon.
Ann Fam Med. 2019 Jul;17(4):336-344. doi: 10.1370/afm.2385.
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has improved access to health insurance, yet millions remain uninsured. Many patients who remain uninsured access care at community health centers (CHCs); however, little is known about their health conditions and health care use. We assessed ambulatory care use and diagnosed health conditions among a cohort of CHC patients uninsured before enactment of the ACA (pre-ACA: January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2013) and followed them after enactment (post-ACA: January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2015).
This retrospective cohort analysis used electronic health record data from CHCs in 11 US states that expanded Medicaid eligibility. We assessed ambulatory care visits and documented health conditions among a cohort of 138,246 patients (aged 19 to 64 years) who were uninsured pre-ACA and either remained uninsured, gained Medicaid, gained other health insurance, or did not have a visit post-ACA. We estimated adjusted predicted probabilities of ambulatory care use using an ordinal logistic mixed-effects regression model.
Post-ACA, 20.9% of patients remained uninsured, 15.0% gained Medicaid, 12.4% gained other insurance, and 51.7% did not have a visit. The majority of patients had ≥1 diagnosed health condition. The adjusted proportion of patients with high use (≥6 visits over 2 years) increased from pre-ACA to post-ACA among those who gained Medicaid (pre-ACA: 23%, post-ACA: 34%, <.001) or gained other insurance (pre-ACA: 29%, post-ACA: 48%, <.001), whereas the percentage fell slightly for those continuously uninsured.
A significant percentage of CHC patients remained uninsured; many who remained uninsured had diagnosed health conditions, and one-half continued to have ≥3 visits to CHCs. CHCs continue to be essential providers for uninsured patients.
《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(ACA)改善了医疗保险的可及性,但仍有数百万人没有保险。许多没有保险的患者在社区卫生中心(CHC)获得医疗服务;然而,对于他们的健康状况和医疗保健使用情况知之甚少。我们评估了 ACA 颁布前(ACA 前:2012 年 1 月 1 日至 2013 年 12 月 31 日)未参保的 CHC 患者的门诊护理使用情况和已确诊的健康状况,并在 ACA 颁布后(ACA 后:2014 年 1 月 1 日至 2015 年 12 月 31 日)对他们进行了随访。
本回顾性队列分析使用了美国 11 个州的 CHC 的电子健康记录数据,这些州扩大了医疗补助的资格。我们评估了 138246 名(年龄在 19 至 64 岁之间)未参保的 ACA 前患者(ACA 前:2012 年 1 月 1 日至 2013 年 12 月 31 日)的门诊就诊情况和已确诊的健康状况,这些患者要么继续未参保,要么获得了医疗补助,要么获得了其他医疗保险,要么在 ACA 后没有就诊。我们使用有序逻辑混合效应回归模型估计了门诊护理使用的调整后预测概率。
ACA 后,20.9%的患者继续未参保,15.0%获得了医疗补助,12.4%获得了其他保险,51.7%没有就诊。大多数患者有≥1种已确诊的健康状况。在获得医疗补助(ACA 前:23%,ACA 后:34%,<0.001)或获得其他保险(ACA 前:29%,ACA 后:48%,<0.001)的患者中,高使用率(2 年内≥6 次就诊)的调整比例从 ACA 前增加到 ACA 后,而在持续未参保的患者中,这一比例略有下降。
相当一部分 CHC 患者仍然没有保险;许多继续未参保的患者有已确诊的健康状况,其中一半继续到 CHC 就诊≥3 次。CHC 仍然是未参保患者的重要提供者。