Gangopadhyaya Anuj, Karpman Michael
Quinlan School of Business, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Health Policy Center, Urban Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2025 Apr 9:e14624. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.14624.
We examine the health insurance coverage and employment effects of an Arkansas Medicaid waiver establishing work requirements for adults with Medicaid.
Using 2016-2019 data from the American Community Survey, we assessed the effects of a Section 1115 waiver requiring adults ages 30-49 in Arkansas to work or participate in community engagement activities for 80 h per month to maintain Medicaid benefits. A difference-in-differences analysis compared changes in coverage and employment among likely nonexempt adults in Arkansas with peers in other Medicaid expansion states. We focused on changes between the 2016-2017 pretreatment and 2018-2019 posttreatment periods, using randomization inference (RI) for statistical inference.
Our study population included adults ages 30-49 likely nonexempt from the policy residing in Arkansas and other Medicaid expansion states. We focused on adults with incomes below 300% of the federal poverty level (FPL), with heterogeneity tests for those below 100% FPL, who were most exposed to the policy. We repeated our analysis for unaffected age groups (19-29 and 50-64) and potentially exempt groups (e.g., parents with dependent children) as placebo tests.
From 2016 to 2019, the share of uninsured adults ages 30-49 in Arkansas increased from 22.6% to 29.9%. Work requirements were associated with a 4.4 percentage-point increase (RI p = 0.04) in uninsurance, concentrated among those with incomes below 100% FPL (7.4 percentage points) (RI p = 0.05). This occurred alongside a decline in reported Medicaid/private nongroup coverage and no significant change in employer coverage. No coverage impacts were observed for unaffected or exempt groups. The association between work requirements and employment among the affected age group (-0.7 points) (RI p = 0.62) was negative, small, and statistically insignificant.
Implementation of Arkansas' work requirements policy was associated with an increase in uninsurance among the targeted age group and no significant change in employment or work effort.
我们研究了阿肯色州一项医疗补助豁免政策的医保覆盖范围和就业影响,该政策为成年医疗补助对象设定了工作要求。
利用美国社区调查2016 - 2019年的数据,我们评估了第1115条豁免政策的影响,该政策要求阿肯色州30至49岁的成年人每月工作或参与社区参与活动80小时,以维持其医疗补助福利。采用差分分析比较了阿肯色州可能无豁免资格的成年人与其他医疗补助扩大州同龄人在医保覆盖范围和就业方面的变化。我们重点关注2016 - 2017年预处理期和2018 - 2019年治疗后期之间的变化,使用随机化推断(RI)进行统计推断。
我们的研究人群包括居住在阿肯色州和其他医疗补助扩大州的30至49岁可能无政策豁免资格的成年人。我们重点关注收入低于联邦贫困线(FPL)300%的成年人,并对那些最受该政策影响的低于FPL 100%的人群进行了异质性测试。我们对未受影响的年龄组(19 - 29岁和50 - 64岁)以及可能豁免的群体(例如有受抚养子女的父母)重复进行分析作为安慰剂测试。
从2016年到2019年,阿肯色州30至49岁未参保成年人的比例从22.6%增至29.9%。工作要求与未参保率上升4.4个百分点相关(RI p = 0.04),这一情况集中在收入低于FPL 100% 的人群中(上升7.4个百分点)(RI p = 0.05)。与此同时,报告的医疗补助/私人非团体保险覆盖率下降,而雇主提供的保险覆盖率没有显著变化。未观察到对未受影响或豁免群体的保险覆盖影响。工作要求与受影响年龄组的就业之间的关联(-0.7个百分点)(RI p = 0.62)为负,幅度小且无统计学意义。
阿肯色州工作要求政策的实施与目标年龄组未参保率上升相关,就业或工作努力方面无显著变化。