Allen Lindsay D, Xu Melinda
Department of Emergency Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2025 Feb;60(1):e14414. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.14414. Epub 2024 Dec 9.
To determine how the rise of telehealth during the COVID-19 pandemic impacted Medicaid enrollees' access to opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment.
Electronic health records from Northwestern Medicine, a large midwestern academic health system, from January 1, 2019 to December 31, 2021.
The exposure was the expansion of telehealth services during the COVID-19 pandemic. A difference-in-differences design was used to determine the impact of telehealth on the probability of receiving any OUD care, any in-person OUD care, and any telehealth OUD care in a month.
DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: The study included Medicaid and privately insured patients older than 18 years of age, diagnosed with OUD, who had any encounter with the Northwestern Medicine system. All outpatient visits with OUD as the primary diagnosis were included in the analysis. There were 486 individuals in the sample and 17,496 person-month observations.
After the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, Medicaid enrollees are 4.5 percentage points (percentage change, 43.7%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 8.7 to 0.3 percentage points; p = 0.035) less likely to receive any OUD care in a month, relative to privately insured patients. While no statistically significant differences in the likehood of receiving in-person OUD care were detected between the groups after exposure, we did observe that Medicaid enrollees are 3.6 percentage points (percentage change 64.2%; 95% CI 6.0 to 1.1 percentage points; p = 0.004) less likely to receive any telehealth OUD care in a month relative to privately insured patients.
While those with private insurance were able to maintain OUD treatment during the pandemic by supplementing in-person care with telehealth, Medicaid enrollees experienced a drop in overall OUD treatment rates due to lower telehealth use. The rise of telehealth for OUD treatment might contribute to widening care gaps for Medicaid enrollees.
确定新冠疫情期间远程医疗的兴起如何影响医疗补助计划参保者获得阿片类物质使用障碍(OUD)治疗的机会。
来自美国中西部一家大型学术医疗系统西北大学医学院的电子健康记录,时间跨度为2019年1月1日至2021年12月31日。
暴露因素为新冠疫情期间远程医疗服务的扩展。采用双重差分设计来确定远程医疗对一个月内接受任何OUD护理、任何面对面OUD护理以及任何远程医疗OUD护理可能性的影响。
数据收集/提取方法:该研究纳入了年龄在18岁以上、被诊断为OUD且与西北大学医学院系统有过接触的医疗补助计划和私人保险患者。所有以OUD作为主要诊断的门诊就诊均纳入分析。样本中有486人,共17496人次月观察数据。
新冠疫情爆发后,与私人保险患者相比,医疗补助计划参保者在一个月内接受任何OUD护理的可能性降低了4.5个百分点(百分比变化为43.7%;95%置信区间[CI]为8.7至0.3个百分点;p = 0.035)。虽然在暴露后两组之间接受面对面OUD护理的可能性没有检测到统计学上的显著差异,但我们确实观察到,与私人保险患者相比,医疗补助计划参保者在一个月内接受任何远程医疗OUD护理的可能性降低了3.6个百分点(百分比变化为64.2%;95%CI为6.0至1.1个百分点;p = 0.004)。
虽然有私人保险的人在疫情期间能够通过远程医疗补充面对面护理来维持OUD治疗,但医疗补助计划参保者由于远程医疗使用较少,总体OUD治疗率有所下降。用于OUD治疗的远程医疗的兴起可能导致医疗补助计划参保者的护理差距扩大。