Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
JAMA Health Forum. 2021 Oct 1;2(10):e212932. doi: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2021.2932. eCollection 2021 Oct.
Medicaid work requirements seek to promote health and personal responsibility but can also jeopardize health care access. Physicians have a central function in assisting patients with exemption requests, but it is unclear how their role affects patient welfare, professionalism, and the ethical and legal justification of programs.
To understand the degree of variability in physician response to assist patients with depression in receiving a Medicaid work requirement exemption.
We conducted a mailed survey experiment among practicing primary care physicians in the first 4 approved states (Arkansas, Kentucky, Indiana, New Hampshire) in July and October of 2019. We report response, cooperation, refusal, and contact rates in line with American Association for Public Opinion Research (AAPOR) standards.
In each state, we used an experimental factorial design to randomize recipients to 1 of 4 patient clinical scenarios.
The primary outcome was the indicator of willingness to assist a patient reporting depression with an exemption.
We received 715 responses (overall AAPOR response rate: 21%; cooperation rate: 84%; refusal rate: 4%; contact rate: 25%). Respondents' mean (SD) age was 54 (12) years; mean (SD) time since graduation, 26 (12) years; 435 (61%) identified as male; 177 as Democrat (25%); 156 as Republican (22%); 197 as Independent/other (28%); and 185 as declined/unknown (26%); the mean (SD) share of Medicaid patients was 29% (21%). We found that 97 of 387 physicians (25%) would offer assistance even when state policy would not support an exemption, and 170 of 315 (54%) would not offer assistance when regulations would require this. Moreover, 49 of 245 respondents (20%) who deemed an exemption appropriate indicated that they would not assist. State, administrative effort, political affiliation, and perceived appropriateness were statistically associated with the odds of assisting with an exemption.
In this survey study of primary care physicians, we found substantial variation regarding willingness to assist patients qualifying for a work requirement exemption where none should exist. Insofar as work requirements are implemented again, it is critical to proactively identify measures to ensure that patients qualifying for exemptions are not put at risk due to either the burdensomeness of exemption procedures, or physicians' political or personal views.
医疗补助工作要求旨在促进健康和个人责任,但也可能危及医疗保健的获取。医生在协助患者提出豁免申请方面发挥着核心作用,但尚不清楚他们的角色如何影响患者的福利、专业精神,以及计划的道德和法律依据。
了解医生在协助患有抑郁症的患者获得医疗补助工作要求豁免方面的反应存在多大程度的差异。
设计、设置和参与者:我们于 2019 年 7 月和 10 月在首批 4 个获得批准的州(阿肯色州、肯塔基州、印第安纳州、新罕布什尔州)的执业初级保健医生中进行了一项邮寄调查实验。我们根据美国民意研究协会(AAPOR)的标准报告了回应率、合作率、拒绝率和联系率。
在每个州,我们都使用实验性因子设计将收件人随机分配到 4 个患者临床情景中的 1 个。
主要结果是表示愿意协助报告患有抑郁症的患者获得豁免的指标。
我们收到了 715 份回复(总体 AAPOR 回复率:21%;合作率:84%;拒绝率:4%;联系率:25%)。受访者的平均(SD)年龄为 54(12)岁;平均(SD)毕业年限为 26(12)年;435 人(61%)为男性;177 人(25%)为民主党人;156 人(22%)为共和党人;197 人(28%)为独立/其他(28%);185 人(26%)为拒绝/未知(26%); Medicaid 患者的平均(SD)比例为 29%(21%)。我们发现,即使州政策不支持豁免,也有 97 名医生中的 387 名(25%)会提供帮助,而有 170 名医生中的 315 名(54%)会在法规要求时不提供帮助。此外,在认为豁免适当的 49 名受访者中的 245 名(20%)表示,他们不会提供帮助。州、行政努力、政治派别和认为适当性与协助豁免的可能性有关。
在这项针对初级保健医生的调查研究中,我们发现,在本不应该存在的情况下,医生协助符合工作要求豁免条件的患者的意愿存在很大差异。只要再次实施工作要求,就必须积极采取措施,确保因豁免程序繁琐或医生的政治或个人观点而不符合豁免条件的患者不会面临风险。