Keller Michelle S, Xu Haiyong, Azocar Francisca, Ettner Susan L
Department of Health Policy and Management, Fielding School of Public Health (Keller, Ettner), and Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, Department of Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine (Xu, Ettner), both at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA); Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles (Keller); Optum, UnitedHealth Group, San Francisco (Azocar).
Psychiatr Serv. 2020 Sep 1;71(9):920-927. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.201900354. Epub 2020 May 22.
Adverse selection in medical insurance is well documented; however, little is known about the role of behavioral health. This study's objective was to examine the probability of being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan among commercially insured patients, according to psychiatric diagnosis.
This cross-sectional study used 2012-2013 benefit design and plan choice data linked to 2011-2012 behavioral health claims for a national sample of individuals (N=116,975) and different family types (couple with at least one dependent, N=59,237; single subscriber with at least one dependent, N=19,066; couple with no dependents, N=40,917) with Optum, UnitedHealth Group "carve-in" plans. Analyses included multiple logistic regressions examining whether the individual (or family) was enrolled in the plan with the lowest deductible as functions of whether individuals (or family members) had any psychiatric diagnosis, the number of psychiatric diagnoses they had, and whether they had individual major psychiatric diagnoses.
For individuals, having any psychiatric diagnosis was associated with an increase of about 10% in the probability of being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plan compared with having no psychiatric diagnosis (44.9% vs. 40.7%, p=0.04). Each additional psychiatric diagnosis increased this probability by three percentage points (p=0.02). A diagnosis of depression was associated with the largest increase.
When individuals were offered the choice of a health insurance plan, having a prior psychiatric diagnosis (specifically depression) was associated with being enrolled in the lowest-deductible plans. Individuals with depression may anticipate future expenditures and select plans accordingly.
医疗保险中的逆向选择现象已有充分记载;然而,关于行为健康的作用却知之甚少。本研究的目的是根据精神科诊断,研究商业保险患者加入最低免赔额保险计划的概率。
这项横断面研究使用了2012 - 2013年的保险福利设计和计划选择数据,并将其与2011 - 2012年全国个体样本(N = 116,975)以及不同家庭类型(至少有一名受抚养人的夫妻,N = 59,237;至少有一名受抚养人的单身参保者,N = 19,066;无受抚养人的夫妻,N = 40,917)的行为健康理赔数据相链接,这些数据来自联合健康集团旗下Optum公司的“内置”计划。分析包括多项逻辑回归,以研究个人(或家庭)是否加入最低免赔额计划,该分析将个人(或家庭成员)是否有任何精神科诊断、他们所患精神科诊断的数量以及是否有主要的个人精神科诊断作为函数进行分析。
对于个人而言,与没有精神科诊断相比,有任何精神科诊断与加入最低免赔额计划的概率增加约10%相关(44.9%对40.7%,p = 0.04)。每增加一项精神科诊断,这一概率就增加三个百分点(p = 0.02)。抑郁症诊断与最大幅度的增加相关。
当个人可以选择医疗保险计划时,之前有精神科诊断(特别是抑郁症)与加入最低免赔额计划相关。患有抑郁症的个人可能会预期未来的支出并相应地选择计划。