Department of Public Health Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA.
Department of Kinesiology and Community Health, College of Applied Health Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL.
Diabetes Care. 2020 Jul;43(7):1449-1455. doi: 10.2337/dc19-0874. Epub 2020 Jan 27.
To examine trends in uninsured rates between 2012 and 2016 among low-income adults aged <65 years and to determine whether the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), which expanded Medicaid, impacted insurance coverage in the Diabetes Belt, a region across 15 southern and eastern U.S. states in which residents have high rates of diabetes.
Data for 3,129 U.S. counties, obtained from the Small Area Health Insurance Estimates and Area Health Resources Files, were used to analyze trends in uninsured rates among populations with a household income ≤138% of the federal poverty level. Multivariable analysis adjusted for the percentage of county populations aged 50-64 years, the percentage of women, Distressed Communities Index value, and rurality.
In 2012, 39% of the population in the Diabetes Belt and 34% in non-Belt counties were uninsured ( < 0.001). In 2016 in states where Medicaid was expanded, uninsured rates declined rapidly to 13% in Diabetes Belt counties and to 15% in non-Belt counties. Adjusting for county demographic and economic factors, Medicaid expansion helped reduce uninsured rates by 12.3% in Diabetes Belt counties and by 4.9% in non-Belt counties. In 2016, uninsured rates were 15% higher for both Diabetes Belt and non-Belt counties in the nonexpansion states than in the expansion states.
ACA-driven Medicaid expansion was more significantly associated with reduced uninsured rates in Diabetes Belt than in non-Belt counties. Initial disparities in uninsured rates between Diabetes Belt and non-Belt counties have not existed since 2014 among expansion states. Future studies should examine whether and how Medicaid expansion may have contributed to an increase in the use of health services in order to prevent and treat diabetes in the Diabetes Belt.
研究 2012 年至 2016 年期间<65 岁低收入成年人的未参保率趋势,并确定扩大医疗补助的《患者保护与平价医疗法案》(ACA)是否对糖尿病带(15 个美国南部和东部州的一个地区,该地区居民糖尿病发病率较高)的保险覆盖产生了影响。
使用来自小区域健康保险估计和区域卫生资源文件的数据,对家庭收入≤138%联邦贫困水平的人群中未参保率的趋势进行了分析。多变量分析调整了 50-64 岁的县人口比例、女性比例、贫困社区指数值和农村地区。
2012 年,糖尿病带内 39%的人口和非带内 34%的人口未参保(<0.001)。在扩大医疗补助的州,2016 年未参保率迅速下降至糖尿病带内的 13%和非带内的 15%。在调整了县人口和经济因素后,医疗补助的扩大有助于降低糖尿病带内未参保率 12.3%,非带内未参保率 4.9%。在没有扩大医疗补助的州,2016 年糖尿病带和非带内的未参保率都比扩大医疗补助的州高 15%。
ACA 驱动的医疗补助扩大与糖尿病带内未参保率的降低更为显著相关,而在扩大医疗补助的州,糖尿病带和非带内的未参保率之间最初的差异自 2014 年以来已经不存在。未来的研究应探讨医疗补助的扩大是否以及如何可能促进卫生服务的利用,以预防和治疗糖尿病带的糖尿病。