Department of Health Law, Policy, and Management, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Division of Public Health Sciences, Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Am J Prev Med. 2024 Jun;66(6):989-998. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2024.02.002. Epub 2024 Feb 10.
This study aimed to examine changes in emergency department (ED) visits for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSCs) among uninsured or Medicaid-covered Black, Hispanic, and White adults aged 26-64 in the first 5 years of the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion.
Using 2010-2018 inpatient and ED discharge data from nine expansion and five nonexpansion states, an event study difference-in-differences regression model was used to estimate changes in number of annual ACSC ED visits per 100 adults ("ACSC ED rate") associated with the 2014 Medicaid expansion, overall and by race/ethnicity. A secondary outcome was the proportion of ACSC ED visits out of all ED visits ("ACSC ED share"). Analyses were conducted in 2022-2023.
Medicaid expansion was associated with no change in ACSC ED rates among all, Black, Hispanic, or White adults. When excluding California, where most counties expanded Medicaid before 2014, expansion was associated with a decrease in ACSC ED rate among all, Black, Hispanic, and White adults. Expansion was also associated with a decrease in ACSC ED share among all, Black, and White adults. White adults experienced the largest reductions in ACSC ED rate and share.
Medicaid expansion was associated with reductions in ACSC ED rates in some expansion states and reductions in ACSC ED share in all expansion states combined, with some heterogeneity by race/ethnicity. Expansion should be coupled with policy efforts to better link newly insured Black and Hispanic patients to non-ED outpatient care, alongside targeted outreach and expanded primary care capacity, which may reduce disparities in ACSC ED visits.
本研究旨在考察平价医疗法案(ACA)扩大医疗补助计划实施后的头 5 年,26-64 岁无保险或有医疗补助的黑种人、西班牙裔和白人成年人在门诊保健敏感条件(ACSC)方面,急诊就诊情况的变化。
利用来自九个扩张州和五个非扩张州的 2010-2018 年住院和急诊出院数据,采用事件研究差分差异回归模型,估计与 2014 年医疗补助扩张相关的每 100 名成年人中每年 ACSC 急诊就诊次数的变化(“ACSC 急诊就诊率”),并按种族/族裔进行总体和分类分析。次要结果是 ACSC 急诊就诊占所有急诊就诊的比例(“ACSC 急诊就诊率”)。分析于 2022-2023 年进行。
医疗补助扩张与所有成年人、黑种人、西班牙裔或白种人 ACSC 急诊就诊率的变化无关。当排除加利福尼亚州(该州大部分县在 2014 年之前就已经扩大了医疗补助)时,扩张与所有成年人、黑种人、西班牙裔和白种人 ACSC 急诊就诊率的下降有关。扩张还与所有成年人、黑种人和白种人 ACSC 急诊就诊率的下降有关。白种人经历了 ACSC 急诊就诊率和就诊率下降幅度最大。
在一些扩张州,医疗补助扩张与 ACSC 急诊就诊率的下降有关,在所有扩张州,与 ACSC 急诊就诊率的下降有关,这与种族/族裔存在一定的异质性。扩张应该与政策努力相结合,以便更好地将新获得保险的黑人和西班牙裔患者与非急诊门诊护理联系起来,同时进行有针对性的外联和扩大初级保健能力,这可能会减少 ACSC 急诊就诊方面的差异。