SEICHE Center for Health and Justice and Section of General Internal Medicine (Howell, Wang) and National Clinician Scholars Program (Balasuriya), Yale School of Medicine, New Haven; Division of General Internal Medicine and Center for Advancing Population Science, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (Hawks); Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Global Public Health, and Department of Population Health, Grossman School of Medicine, New York University, New York City (Chang); Health, Homelessness, and Criminal Justice Lab, Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute, and Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Hennepin Healthcare, Minneapolis (Winkelman).
Psychiatr Serv. 2023 Oct 1;74(10):1019-1026. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.20220171. Epub 2023 Apr 5.
Individuals with criminal legal involvement have high rates of substance use and other mental disorders. Before implementation of the Affordable Care Act's Medicaid expansion, they also had low health insurance coverage. The objective of this study was to assess the impact of Medicaid expansion on health insurance coverage and use of treatment for substance use or other mental disorders in this population.
The authors used restricted data (2010-2017) from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). Using a difference-in-differences approach, the authors estimated the impact of Medicaid expansion on health insurance coverage and treatment for substance use or other mental disorders among individuals with recent criminal legal involvement.
The sample consisted of 9,910 NSDUH respondents who were ages 18-64 years, had a household income ≤138% of the federal poverty level, and reported past-year criminal legal involvement. Medicaid expansion was associated with an 18 percentage-point increase in insurance coverage but no change in receipt of substance use treatment among individuals with substance use disorder. Individuals with any other mental illness had a 16 percentage-point increase in insurance coverage but no change in receipt of mental health treatment.
Despite a large increase in health insurance coverage among individuals with criminal legal involvement and substance use or other mental disorders, Medicaid expansion was not associated with a significant change in treatment use for these conditions. Insurance access alone appears to be insufficient to increase treatment for substance use or other mental disorders in this population.
有犯罪法律涉入的个体有较高的物质使用和其他精神障碍的比率。在《平价医疗法案》的医疗补助扩大计划实施之前,他们的医疗保险覆盖率也较低。本研究的目的是评估医疗补助扩大计划对该人群的医疗保险覆盖率和治疗物质使用或其他精神障碍的使用的影响。
作者使用了国家药物使用和健康调查(NSDUH)的受限数据(2010-2017 年)。作者使用差异中的差异方法,估计了医疗补助扩大计划对有近期犯罪法律涉入的个体的医疗保险覆盖率和治疗物质使用或其他精神障碍的影响。
样本由 9910 名 NSDUH 受访者组成,年龄在 18-64 岁之间,家庭收入≤联邦贫困水平的 138%,并报告了过去一年的犯罪法律涉入。医疗补助扩大计划与保险覆盖率增加了 18 个百分点有关,但物质使用障碍患者的物质使用治疗率没有变化。任何其他精神疾病的个体的保险覆盖率增加了 16 个百分点,但精神健康治疗率没有变化。
尽管有犯罪法律涉入和物质使用或其他精神障碍的个体的医疗保险覆盖率大幅增加,但医疗补助扩大计划与这些疾病的治疗使用率的显著变化无关。仅仅增加保险覆盖似乎不足以增加该人群的物质使用或其他精神障碍的治疗。