MedStar Health Research Institute, Washington, DC; MedStar-Georgetown Surgical Outcomes Research Center, Washington, DC; Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
MedStar Health Research Institute, Washington, DC; MedStar-Georgetown Surgical Outcomes Research Center, Washington, DC.
Surgery. 2019 Nov;166(5):820-828. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2019.05.005. Epub 2019 Aug 9.
Obesity disproportionately affects vulnerable populations. Bariatric surgery is an effective long-term treatment for obesity-related complications; however, bariatric surgical rates are lower among racial minorities and low-income and publicly insured patients. The Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion improved access to health insurance, but its impact on bariatric surgical disparities has not been evaluated. We sought to determine the impact of the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion on disparate utilization rates of bariatric surgery.
A total of 47,974 nonelderly adult bariatric surgical patients (ages 18-64 years) were identified in 2 Medicaid-expansion states (Kentucky and Maryland) versus 2 nonexpansion control states (Florida and North Carolina) between 2012 and 2015 using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project's State Inpatient Database. Poisson interrupted time series were conducted to determine the adjusted incidence rates of bariatric surgery by insurance (Medicaid/uninsured versus privately insured), income (high income versus low income), and race (African American versus white). The difference in the counts of bariatric surgery were then calculated to measure the gap in bariatric surgery rates.
The adjusted incidence rate of bariatric surgery among Medicaid or uninsured and low-income patients increased by 15.8% and 5.1% per quarter, respectively, after the Affordable Care Act in expansion states (P < .001). No marginal change was seen in privately insured and high-income patients in expansion states. The adjusted incidence rates increased among African American and white patients, but these rates did not change significantly before and after the Affordable Care Act in expansion states.
The gap in bariatric surgery rates by insurance and income was reduced after the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion, but racial disparities persisted. Future research should track these trends and identify factors to reduce racial disparity in bariatric surgery.
肥胖对弱势群体的影响不成比例。减重手术是治疗肥胖相关并发症的有效长期治疗方法;然而,少数族裔和低收入以及公共保险患者的减重手术率较低。平价医疗法案的医疗补助扩大改善了医疗保险的获得,但尚未评估其对减重手术差异的影响。我们试图确定平价医疗法案的医疗补助扩大对减重手术差异利用率的影响。
总共在 2012 年至 2015 年期间,在 2 个医疗补助扩大州(肯塔基州和马里兰州)与 2 个非扩大控制州(佛罗里达州和北卡罗来纳州),通过医疗保健成本和利用项目的州住院数据库,确定了 47974 名非老年成年减重手术患者(年龄在 18-64 岁之间)。采用泊松中断时间序列分析,根据保险(医疗补助/无保险与私人保险)、收入(高收入与低收入)和种族(非裔美国人与白人)调整减重手术的调整发病率。然后计算减重手术数量的差异,以衡量减重手术率的差距。
在平价医疗法案扩大的州,医疗补助或无保险和低收入患者的减重手术调整发病率分别每季度增加 15.8%和 5.1%(P<0.001)。在扩大的州,私人保险和高收入患者的边际变化不大。非裔美国人和白人患者的调整发病率增加,但在平价医疗法案扩大之前和之后,这些比率在扩大的州没有明显变化。
在平价医疗法案的医疗补助扩大后,保险和收入的减重手术率差距缩小,但种族差异仍然存在。未来的研究应跟踪这些趋势,并确定减少减重手术种族差异的因素。