Department of Occupational Therapy, College of Allied Health Sciences, Augusta University, Augusta, GA, United States of America.
College of Medicine, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 May 25;16(5):e0251353. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251353. eCollection 2021.
Research on children and youth on the autism spectrum reveal racial and ethnic disparities in access to healthcare and utilization, but there is less research to understand how disparities persist as autistic adults age. We need to understand racial-ethnic inequities in obtaining eligibility for Medicare and/or Medicaid coverage, as well as inequities in spending for autistic enrollees under these public programs.
We conducted a cross-sectional cohort study of U.S. publicly-insured adults on the autism spectrum using 2012 Medicare-Medicaid Linked Enrollee Analytic Data Source (n = 172,071). We evaluated differences in race-ethnicity by eligibility (Medicare-only, Medicaid-only, Dual-Eligible) and spending.
The majority of white adults (49.87%) were full-dual eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid. In contrast, only 37.53% of Black, 34.65% Asian/Pacific Islander, and 35.94% of Hispanic beneficiaries were full-dual eligible for Medicare and Medicare, with most only eligible for state-funded Medicaid. Adjusted logistic models controlling for gender, intellectual disability status, costly chronic condition, rural status, county median income, and geographic region of residence revealed that Black beneficiaries were significantly less likely than white beneficiaries to be dual-eligible across all ages. Across these three beneficiary types, total spending exceeded $10 billion. Annual total expenditures median expenditures for full-dual and Medicaid-only eligible beneficiaries were higher among white beneficiaries as compared with Black beneficiaries.
Public health insurance in the U.S. including Medicare and Medicaid aim to reduce inequities in access to healthcare that might exist due to disability, income, or old age. In contrast to these ideals, our study reveals that racial-ethnic minority autistic adults who were eligible for public insurance across all U.S. states in 2012 experience disparities in eligibility for specific programs and spending. We call for further evaluation of system supports that promote clear pathways to disability and public health insurance among those with lifelong developmental disabilities.
对自闭症谱系儿童和青少年的研究表明,在获得医疗保健和利用方面存在种族和民族差异,但对于随着自闭症成人年龄增长,这些差异如何持续存在的研究较少。我们需要了解在获得医疗保险和/或医疗补助覆盖资格方面的种族和民族不平等,以及在这些公共计划下,自闭症参保者的支出不平等。
我们使用 2012 年医疗保险-医疗补助联合参保者分析数据源对美国自闭症谱系的公共保险成年人进行了横断面队列研究(n=172071)。我们评估了种族和民族差异在资格(仅医疗保险、仅医疗补助、双重资格)和支出方面的差异。
大多数白人成年人(49.87%)同时符合医疗保险和医疗补助的双重资格。相比之下,只有 37.53%的黑人、34.65%的亚洲/太平洋岛民和 35.94%的西班牙裔受益人为医疗保险和医疗保险的双重资格,其中大多数仅符合州资助的医疗补助资格。调整后的逻辑模型控制了性别、智力残疾状况、昂贵的慢性疾病、农村状况、县中位收入和居住的地理区域,结果表明,黑人受益人与白人受益人的双重资格在所有年龄段都显著较低。在这三种受益人群中,总支出超过 100 亿美元。与黑人受益人的支出相比,白人受益人的全额双重资格和仅医疗补助资格受益人的年总支出中位数较高。
美国的公共健康保险,包括医疗保险和医疗补助,旨在减少因残疾、收入或老年而可能存在的获得医疗保健方面的不平等。与这些理想相反,我们的研究表明,2012 年有资格获得美国所有州公共保险的少数族裔自闭症成年患者在特定项目的资格和支出方面存在差异。我们呼吁进一步评估系统支持,以促进那些终身发育障碍者获得残疾和公共健康保险的明确途径。