Department of Urology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT; Department of Urology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Department of Urology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT.
Urol Oncol. 2023 Apr;41(4):206.e21-206.e27. doi: 10.1016/j.urolonc.2023.01.014. Epub 2023 Feb 4.
The expansion of state Medicaid programs associated with the Affordable Care Act has led to significant increases in insurance coverage for economically vulnerable patients, however barriers to accessing cancer care still exist. To develop strategies to improve healthcare access, we characterized access to new urologic cancer care for patients with Medicaid insurance in the United States.
Using a secret shopper approach, we contacted a representative sample of facilities designated for cancer care in United States. Trained volunteers posed as a family member seeking urologic cancer care using a simulated scenario of a parent with a new diagnosis of a localized kidney tumor. The primary study outcome was acceptance of Medicaid. In addition, we assessed facility characteristics associated with Medicaid acceptance relating to state Medicaid expansion status, Medicare reimbursement rates, and teaching hospital status using data from the Medicare & Medicaid Services Hospital General Information data file, the American Hospital Directory, and the American Medical Association of Colleges Organizational Characteristics Database.
We sampled a total of 389 facilities, of which 14.4% did not accept new Medicaid patients. Medicaid acceptance was higher in facilities located in states that elected to expand Medicaid through the ACA vs. non-expansion states (90.1% vs. 77.4% respectively, P < 0.001). Facilities accepting patients with Medicaid were located in states with higher mean Medicaid-to-Medicare fee indexes (0.70 for Medicaid-accepting vs. 0.65 for non-accepting facilities, P < 0.001). In addition, Medicaid acceptance was higher in teaching hospitals vs. non-teaching facilities (93.8% vs. 83.4% P = 0.02), and medical school affiliated facilities (89.2% vs. 79.7% P = 0.01).
We identified access disparities for patients with Medicaid insurance seeking urologic cancer care at centers. These findings highlight opportunities to improve the quality and timeliness of cancer care.
平价医疗法案(Affordable Care Act)推动了州医疗补助计划的扩展,为经济弱势群体的患者提供了大量的保险覆盖,但获得癌症护理的障碍仍然存在。为了制定改善医疗保健获取途径的策略,我们对美国拥有医疗补助保险的新泌尿科癌症患者的护理途径进行了特征描述。
我们采用秘密购物者的方法,联系了美国指定的癌症护理机构的代表性样本。受过训练的志愿者使用模拟的场景,即一位新诊断出局限性肾肿瘤的家长,作为家属寻求泌尿科癌症护理。主要研究结果是接受医疗补助。此外,我们评估了与州医疗补助扩张状况、医疗保险报销率和教学医院状况相关的设施特征,使用了医疗保险和医疗补助服务医院综合信息数据文件、美国医院名录和美国医学院协会组织特征数据库的数据。
我们共抽样了 389 个机构,其中 14.4%不接受新的医疗补助患者。选择通过平价医疗法案扩大医疗补助的州的医疗机构接受新的医疗补助患者的比例高于未扩大的州(分别为 90.1%和 77.4%,P < 0.001)。接受医疗补助患者的机构位于医疗补助到医疗保险费用指数较高的州(接受医疗补助的机构为 0.70,不接受的机构为 0.65,P < 0.001)。此外,教学医院比非教学医院(93.8%比 83.4%,P = 0.02)和医学院附属医院(89.2%比 79.7%,P = 0.01)更愿意接受医疗补助患者。
我们发现寻求泌尿科癌症护理的医疗补助患者在中心获得护理的机会存在差异。这些发现突出了改善癌症护理质量和及时性的机会。