Department of Health Behavior and Policy and MSTP Program, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA.
Center for Gerontology & Healthcare Research, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI, USA.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2023 Oct;24(10):1565-1572. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2023.08.007. Epub 2023 Sep 9.
To examine the impact of COVID-19 on clinical health outcomes and health-related social needs among Medicaid-Medicare dual-eligible beneficiaries.
Scoping review.
Dual eligibles during COVID-19.
We performed a comprehensive scoping review including observational studies, clinical trials, and original empirical research studies of PubMed and CINAHL. We generated a list of terms related to programs that both serve dual eligibles and address our desired outcomes. With the assistance of a medical librarian, we identified relevant abstracts published during COVID-19 meeting our inclusion criteria. We performed full-text reviews of relevant abstracts and selected the final studies. We extracted the study population, design, and major findings, then conducted thematic analysis.
1100 articles were identified, with 439 deemed relevant. On full text-review, 15 articles met inclusion criteria representing more than 86 million Medicare beneficiaries. No studies were specific only to dual eligibles. Topic areas included in this review include COVID-19 case counts (2 articles), mortality (8 articles), hospitalizations (7 articles), food insecurity (1 article), self-reported mental health (1 article), and social connectedness (2 articles). Dual eligibles had disparate COVID-19-related outcomes from Medicare-only enrollees in 12 of 15 studies. Studies show higher mortality for dual eligibles overall, but this was not true for dual eligibles in nursing homes and assisted living communities. Dual eligibles were more likely to experience food insecurity. More favorably, dual eligibles reported greater social connectedness.
Dual eligibles had different outcomes from Medicare-only recipients in multiple health outcomes and health-related social needs during COVID-19, but studies are limited, particularly in terms of health-related social needs. Future work focusing on outcomes only among dual-eligible beneficiaries, integrated care programs, and fiscal alignment between Medicare and Medicaid plans may help stakeholders address health needs specific to dual eligibles.
研究 COVID-19 对符合联邦医疗补助和联邦医疗保险双重资格的受益人的临床健康结果和与健康相关的社会需求的影响。
范围综述。
COVID-19 期间的双重合格者。
我们对 PubMed 和 CINAHL 中的观察性研究、临床试验和原始实证研究进行了全面的范围综述。我们生成了一个与同时为双重合格者提供服务并解决我们期望结果的计划相关的术语列表。在一名医学图书馆员的协助下,我们确定了在 COVID-19 期间发表的符合纳入标准的相关摘要。我们对相关摘要进行了全文审查,并选择了最终研究。我们提取了研究人群、设计和主要发现,然后进行了主题分析。
共确定了 1100 篇文章,其中 439 篇被认为是相关的。在全文审查中,有 15 篇文章符合纳入标准,代表了超过 8600 万 Medicare 受益人的数据。没有专门针对双重合格者的研究。本综述涵盖的主题领域包括 COVID-19 病例数(2 篇文章)、死亡率(8 篇文章)、住院(7 篇文章)、食物不安全(1 篇文章)、自我报告的心理健康(1 篇文章)和社会联系(2 篇文章)。在 15 项研究中,有 12 项研究表明,与 Medicare 仅参保者相比,双重合格者的 COVID-19 相关结局存在差异。研究表明,总体而言,双重合格者的死亡率更高,但在疗养院和辅助生活社区的双重合格者中并非如此。双重合格者更有可能经历食物不安全。更有利的是,双重合格者报告了更大的社会联系。
在 COVID-19 期间,双重合格者在多个健康结果和与健康相关的社会需求方面与 Medicare 仅参保者的结果不同,但研究有限,特别是在与健康相关的社会需求方面。未来专注于双重合格者受益人的仅结局、综合护理计划以及 Medicare 和 Medicaid 计划之间的财政协调的工作可能有助于利益相关者解决双重合格者的具体健康需求。