| Literature DB >> 26457245 |
Van T Tong1, Lucinda J England2, Ann Malarcher2, Jeanne Mahoney3, Britta Anderson3, Jay Schulkin3.
Abstract
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires states to provide tobacco-cessation services without cost-sharing for pregnant traditional Medicaid-beneficiaries effective October 2010. It is unknown the extent to which obstetricians-gynecologists are aware of the Medicaid tobacco-cessation benefit. We sought to examine the awareness of the Medicaid tobacco-cessation benefit in a national sample of obstetricians-gynecologists and assessed whether reimbursement would influence their tobacco cessation practice. In 2012, a survey was administered to a national stratified-random sample of obstetricians-gynecologists (n = 252) regarding awareness of the Medicaid tobacco-cessation benefit. Results were stratified by the percentage of pregnant Medicaid patients. Chi-squared tests (p < 0.05) were used to assess significant associations. Analyses were conducted in 2014. Eighty-three percent of respondents were unaware of the benefit. Lack of awareness increased as the percentage of pregnant Medicaid patients in their practices decreased (range = 71.9%-96.8%; P = 0.02). One-third (36.1%) of respondents serving pregnant Medicaid patients reported that reimbursement would influence them to increase their cessation services. Four out of five obstetricians-gynecologists surveyed in 2012 were unaware of the ACA provision that required states to provide tobacco cessation coverage for pregnant traditional Medicaid beneficiaries as of October 2010. Broad promotion of the Medicaid tobacco-cessation benefit could reduce treatment barriers.Entities:
Keywords: Insurance; Medicaid; Obstetricians–gynecologists; Pregnancy; Smoking cessation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26457245 PMCID: PMC4600045 DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2015.08.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Med Rep ISSN: 2211-3355
Obstetricians–gynecologists' awareness of Medicaid tobacco-cessation benefit for pregnant patients covered by Medicaid (n = 252).
| Total | Percent of pregnant patients covered by Medicaid | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0% | 1–24% | 25–50% | > 50% | p-Value | ||
| 100.0% | 13.2% | 30.2% | 31.4% | 25.2% | ||
| Yes | 17.0% | 3.2% | 15.3% | 16.0% | 28.1% | 0.02 |
| No | 83.0% | 96.8% | 84.7% | 84.0% | 71.9% | |
| It won't change how I provide services because our services are already adequate | 7.4% | NA | 15.5% | 1.4% | 5.2% | 0.09 |
| It won't change how I provide services as it won't address existing barriers to delivering service | 30.2% | NA | 29.6% | 32.9% | 27.6% | |
| It won't change for other reasons | 5.4% | NA | 5.6% | 2.7% | 8.6% | |
| I will likely increase our services because of improvement in reimbursement | 36.1% | NA | 31.0% | 38.4% | 39.7% | |
| I will likely increase our services for other reasons | 4.5% | NA | 1.4% | 6.8% | 5.2% | |
| I don't know | 16.3% | NA | 16.9% | 17.8% | 13.8% | |
ACA = Affordable Care Act.
Based on chi-square tests.
Respondents (n = 202) could only mark one response.