Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2021 Jun 14;76(6):1218-1230. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbaa123.
Whether the Affordable Care Act (ACA) insurance expansions improved access to care and health for adults aged 51-64 years has not been closely examined. This study examined longitudinal changes in access, utilization, and health for low-socioeconomic status adults aged 51-64 years before and after the ACA Medicaid expansion.
Longitudinal difference-in-differences (DID) study before (2010-2014) and after (2016) Medicaid expansion, including N = 2,088 noninstitutionalized low-education adults aged 51-64 years (n = 633 in Medicaid expansion states, n = 1,455 in nonexpansion states) from the nationally representative biennial Health and Retirement Study. Outcomes included coverage (any, Medicaid, and private), access (usual source of care, difficulty finding a physician, foregone care, cost-related medication nonadherence, and out-of-pocket costs), utilization (outpatient visit and hospitalization), and health status.
Low-education adults aged 51-64 years had increased rates of Medicaid coverage (+10.6 percentage points [pp] in expansion states, +3.2 pp in nonexpansion states, DID +7.4 pp, p = .001) and increased likelihood of hospitalizations (+9.2 pp in expansion states, -1.1 pp in nonexpansion states, DID +10.4 pp, p = .003) in Medicaid expansion compared with nonexpansion states after 2014. Those in expansion states also had a smaller increase in limitations in paid work/housework over time, compared to those in nonexpansion states (+3.6 pp in expansion states, +11.0 pp in nonexpansion states, DID -7.5 pp, p = .006). There were no other significant differences in access, utilization, or health trends between expansion and nonexpansion states.
After Medicaid expansion, low-education status adults aged 51-64 years were more likely to be hospitalized, suggesting poor baseline access to chronic disease management and pent-up demand for hospital services.
平价医疗法案(ACA)的保险扩张是否改善了 51-64 岁成年人的医疗服务可及性和健康状况,这一点尚未得到密切关注。本研究通过纵向比较,在 ACA 医疗补助扩张前后(2010-2014 年和 2016 年),考察了低社会经济地位的 51-64 岁成年人的可及性、利用率和健康状况的变化。
采用医疗保险扩大前后的纵向差异(DID)研究,包括来自全国代表性的两年一次的健康与退休研究的 2088 名非机构化、低教育程度的 51-64 岁成年人(医疗补助扩张州 633 人,非扩张州 1455 人)。结果包括覆盖范围(全部、医疗补助和私人)、可及性(通常的医疗来源、找医生困难、放弃治疗、与费用相关的药物不依从、自付费用)、利用率(门诊就诊和住院)和健康状况。
51-64 岁的低教育程度成年人获得医疗补助的比例有所增加(扩张州增加了 10.6 个百分点,非扩张州增加了 3.2 个百分点,DID 增加了 7.4 个百分点,p=0.001),与非扩张州相比,扩张州的住院率也有所增加(扩张州增加了 9.2 个百分点,非扩张州减少了 1.1 个百分点,DID 增加了 10.4 个百分点,p=0.003)。与非扩张州相比,扩张州的成年人在有偿工作/家务方面的限制在一段时间内也有较小的增加(扩张州增加了 3.6 个百分点,非扩张州增加了 11.0 个百分点,DID 减少了 7.5 个百分点,p=0.006)。在可及性、利用率或健康趋势方面,扩张州和非扩张州之间没有其他显著差异。
在医疗补助扩大后,51-64 岁的低教育程度成年人更有可能住院,这表明他们在慢性病管理方面的可及性较差,且对住院服务的需求积压。