Literature DB >> 15149475

Managed care and preventable hospitalization among Medicaid adults.

Jayasree Basu1, Bernard Friedman, Helen Burstin.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The study examines the association between managed care enrollment and preventable hospitalization patterns of adult Medicaid enrollees hospitalized in four states. DATA SOURCES/STUDY
SETTING: Hospital discharge data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) database of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) for New York (NY), Pennsylvania (PA), Wisconsin (WI), and Tennessee (TN) residents in the age group 20-64 hospitalized in those states, linked to the Area Resource File (ARF) and American Hospital Association (AHA) survey files for 1997. STUDY
DESIGN: The study uses separate logistic models for each state comparing preventable admissions with marker admissions (urgent, insensitive to primary care). The model controls for socioeconomic and demographic variables, and severity of illness. PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: Consistently in different states, private health maintenance organization (HMO) enrollment was associated with fewer preventable admissions than marker admissions, compared to private fee-for-service (FFS). However, Medicaid managed care enrollment was not associated with a reduction in preventable admissions, compared to Medicaid FFS.
CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis suggests that the preventable hospitalization pattern for private HMO enrollees differs significantly from that for commercial FFS enrollees. However, little difference is found between Medicaid HMO enrollees and Medicaid FFS patients. The findings did not vary by the level of Medicaid managed care penetration in the study states.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15149475      PMCID: PMC1361021          DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2004.00241.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Res        ISSN: 0017-9124            Impact factor:   3.402


  27 in total

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6.  Impacts of Medicaid managed care on children.

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8.  Primary care, HMO enrollment, and hospitalization for ambulatory care sensitive conditions: a new approach.

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6.  Medicaid Utilization and Spending among Homeless Adults in New Jersey: Implications for Medicaid-Funded Tenancy Support Services.

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7.  Ambulatory Care Sensitive Hospitalizations among Medicaid Beneficiaries with Chronic Conditions.

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8.  Have Racial Disparities in Ambulatory Care Sensitive Admissions Abated Over Time?

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9.  Poverty related risk for potentially preventable hospitalisations among children in Taiwan.

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10.  Secondary surge capacity: a framework for understanding long-term access to primary care for medically vulnerable populations in disaster recovery.

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