Department of Health Policy and Management, College of Health Science, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
BK21 FOUR R&E Center for Learning Health Systems, Korea University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
J Gen Intern Med. 2023 Jul;38(9):2059-2068. doi: 10.1007/s11606-023-08145-z. Epub 2023 Apr 24.
Unmet need for medical care is common among Medicare beneficiaries, but less is known whether unmet need differs between those with high and low levels of need.
To examine unmet need for medical care among fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare beneficiaries by level of care need.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We included 29,123 FFS Medicare beneficiaries from the 2010-2016 Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey.
Our outcomes included three measures of unmet need for medical care. We also examined the reasons for not obtaining needed medical care. Our primary independent variable was a categorization of groups by levels of care need: those with low need (the relatively healthy and those with simple chronic conditions) and those with high need (those with minor complex chronic conditions, those with major complex chronic conditions, the frail, and the non-elderly disabled).
The rates of reporting unmet need for medical care were highest among the non-elderly disabled (23.5% [95% CI: 19.8-27.3] for not seeing a doctor despite medical need, 23.8% [95% CI: 20.0-27.6] for experiencing delayed care, and 12.9% [95% CI: 10.2-15.6] for experiencing trouble in getting needed care). However, the rates of reporting unmet need were relatively low among the other groups (ranging from 3.1 to 9.9% for not seeing a doctor despite medical need, from 3.4 to 5.9% for experiencing delayed care, and from 1.9 to 2.9% for experiencing trouble in getting needed care). The most common reason for not seeing a doctor despite medical need was concerns about high costs for the non-elderly disabled (24%), but perception that the issue was not too serious was the most common reason for the other groups.
Our findings suggest the need for targeted policy interventions to address unmet need for non-elderly disabled FFS Medicare beneficiaries, especially for improving affordability of care.
医疗保险受益人群中存在未满足的医疗需求,但对于高需求和低需求人群之间的未满足需求是否存在差异,了解甚少。
按护理需求水平检查医疗保险按服务收费计划(FFS)受益人群的医疗需求未满足情况。
设计、地点和参与者:我们纳入了 2010 年至 2016 年医疗保险当前受益人大调查中的 29123 名 FFS 医疗保险受益人群。
我们的结局指标包括三种医疗需求未满足的衡量指标。我们还检查了未获得所需医疗的原因。我们的主要自变量是按护理需求水平分类的组:低需求人群(相对健康人群和患有简单慢性病的人群)和高需求人群(患有轻微复杂慢性病的人群、患有严重复杂慢性病的人群、身体虚弱的人群和非老年残疾人群)。
在非老年残疾人群中,报告医疗需求未满足的比例最高(23.5%[95%CI:19.8-27.3]表示尽管有医疗需求但仍未看医生,23.8%[95%CI:20.0-27.6]表示延迟治疗,12.9%[95%CI:10.2-15.6]表示难以获得所需的护理)。然而,其他组报告需求未满足的比例相对较低(23.1%[95%CI:19.4-26.8]表示尽管有医疗需求但仍未看医生,3.1%[95%CI:2.4-3.9]表示延迟治疗,1.9%[95%CI:1.4-2.4]表示难以获得所需的护理)。尽管有医疗需求但仍未看医生的最常见原因是非老年残疾人群担心医疗费用过高(24%),但其他组最常见的原因是认为问题不太严重。
我们的研究结果表明,需要有针对性的政策干预措施来解决非老年残疾 FFS 医疗保险受益人群的未满足需求,特别是要提高医疗服务的可负担性。