Literature DB >> 28804075

Do Medical Homes Offer Improved Diabetes Care for Medicaid Enrollees with Co-occurring Schizophrenia?

William J Olesiuk, Joel F Farley, Marisa Elena Domino, Alan R Ellis, Joseph P Morrissey.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To determine whether Medicaid recipients with co-occurring diabetes and schizophrenia that are medical-home-enrolled are more likely to receive guideline-concordant diabetes care than those who are not medical-home-enrolled, controlling for confounders.
METHODS: We used administrative data on adult, non-dually eligible North Carolina Medicaid beneficiaries with diagnoses of both diabetes and schizophrenia (N= 3,897) for fiscal years 2008-2010. We evaluated the relationship between medical-home-enrollment and receipt of recommended diabetes care reimbursed by Medicaid (lipid profiles, HbA1c tests, medical attention for nephropathy, and eye exams for those over 30), using fixed-effects regression models on person-month level data.
RESULTS: There was a statisti-cally significant, positive effect of medical home enrollment on receipt of Medicaid-funded eye exams, HbA1c tests, and medical attention for nephropathy, but not receipt of lipid profiles.
CONCLUSIONS: For Medicaid enrollees with diabetes and schizophrenia, medical home enrollment is generally associated with greater likelihood of receiving guideline-concordant diabetes care.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28804075      PMCID: PMC5826756          DOI: 10.1353/hpu.2017.0094

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Care Poor Underserved        ISSN: 1049-2089


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