University of Minnesota Medical School, 631 SE Oak St, Minneapolis, MN, 5414, USA.
Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute, 701 Park Ave., S9.104/S2.311, Minneapolis, MN, 55415, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2020 Oct;35(10):2983-2989. doi: 10.1007/s11606-020-05921-z. Epub 2020 May 29.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) began encouraging governors to implement work requirements for Medicaid enrollees using section 1115 waivers in 2018. Significant controversy surrounds such attempts, but we know little about the perceptions and experiences of enrollees.
To characterize experiences of work and its relationship to participation in Medicaid and other public programs among potential targets of Medicaid work requirements.
In-depth, semi-structured, one-time qualitative interviews.
35 very low-income, non-disabled Medicaid expansion enrollees participating in a county-sponsored Medicaid managed care plan as a part of a larger study.
We used a biographical narrative interpretive method during interviews including questions about the use of employment and income support and other public programs including from state and federal disability programs. Our team iteratively coded verbatim transcripts allowing for emergent themes.
Interview data revealed high motivation for, and broad participation in, formal and informal paid work. Eight themes emerged: (1) critical poverty (for example, "I'm not content, but what choices do I have?"); (2) behavioral and physical health barriers to work; (3) social barriers: unstable housing, low education, criminal justice involvement; (4) work, pride, and shame; (5) inflexible, unstable work (for example, "Can I have a job that will accommodate my doctor appointments?…Will my therapy have to suffer? You know? So it's a double edged sword."); (6) Medicaid supports the ability to work; (7) lack of transparency and misalignment of program eligibility (for example, "It's not like I don't want to work because I would like to work. It's just that I don't want to be homeless again, right?"); and (8) barriers, confusion, and contradictions about federal disability.
We conclude that bipartisan solutions prioritizing the availability of well-paying jobs and planful transitions off of public programs would best serve very low-income, work-capable Medicaid enrollees.
医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)于 2018 年开始鼓励各州长利用第 1115 项豁免权为医疗补助参保者实施工作要求。此类尝试引起了很大争议,但我们对参保者的看法和体验知之甚少。
描述工作经历及其与医疗补助和其他公共计划参与之间的关系,这些经历是医疗补助工作要求的潜在目标。
深入、半结构化、一次性定性访谈。
35 名非常低收入、无残疾的医疗补助扩张参保者,作为更大研究的一部分,参与了县主办的医疗补助管理式医疗计划。
我们在访谈中使用了传记叙事解释方法,包括关于就业和收入支持以及其他公共计划(包括州和联邦残疾计划)的使用问题。我们的团队对逐字记录进行迭代编码,以允许出现新的主题。
访谈数据显示,参保者对正式和非正式有偿工作有着强烈的动机,并广泛参与其中。出现了八个主题:(1)严重贫困(例如,“我不满足,但我有什么选择?”);(2)工作的行为和身体健康障碍;(3)社会障碍:不稳定的住房、低教育程度、刑事司法涉入;(4)工作、自豪和羞耻;(5)灵活、不稳定的工作(例如,“我能找到一份能容纳我看医生预约的工作吗?……我的治疗会受到影响吗?你知道吗?所以这是一把双刃剑。”);(6)医疗补助支持工作能力;(7)计划资格缺乏透明度和不匹配(例如,“我不是不想工作,因为我想工作。只是我不想再次无家可归,对吧?”);以及(8)联邦残疾方面的障碍、困惑和矛盾。
我们的结论是,两党解决方案应优先考虑提供高薪工作,并计划逐步脱离公共计划,这将最适合非常低收入、有工作能力的医疗补助参保者。