Adam I Biener 1 , Samuel H Zuvekas 1 , Steven C Hill 1 . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To quantify the effect of Medicaid expansions on office-based care among the newly eligible. DATA SOURCE: 2008-2014 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. STUDY DESIGN: The main sample is adults age 26-64 with incomes ≤138% of poverty who were not eligible for Medicaid prior to the Affordable Care Act. For this population, difference-in-differences linear probability models compare utilization between expansion and nonexpansion states and between 2008-2013 and 2014. EXTRACTION METHODS: Medicaid eligibility is simulated using data on family relationships, state of residence, and income. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Relative to comparable adults in nonexpansion states, newly eligible adults in expansion states were 9.1 percentage points more likely to have any office-based primary care physician visit in 2014, a 21.4% increase from 2013 (p-value = .004); 6.9 percentage points more likely to have a specialist visit, a 25.2% increase from 2013 (p-value = .036); and 5.1 percentage points more likely to have a visit with a nurse practitioner, nurse, or physician assistant, a 34.5% increase from 2013 (p-value = .016). CONCLUSIONS: State Medicaid expansions in 2014 were associated with greater likelihoods of visits with a variety of office-based providers. The estimated effects are larger among newly eligible compared with previous estimates on broader populations of low-income adults. © Published 2017. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
OBJECTIVE: To quantify the effect of Medicaid expansions on office-based care among the newly eligible. DATA SOURCE: 2008-2014 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. STUDY DESIGN: The main sample is adults age 26-64 with incomes ≤138% of poverty who were not eligible for Medicaid prior to the Affordable Care Act. For this population, difference-in-differences linear probability models compare utilization between expansion and nonexpansion states and between 2008-2013 and 2014. EXTRACTION METHODS: Medicaid eligibility is simulated using data on family relationships, state of residence, and income. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Relative to comparable adults in nonexpansion states, newly eligible adults in expansion states were 9.1 percentage points more likely to have any office-based primary care physician visit in 2014, a 21.4% increase from 2013 (p-value = .004); 6.9 percentage points more likely to have a specialist visit, a 25.2% increase from 2013 (p-value = .036); and 5.1 percentage points more likely to have a visit with a nurse practitioner, nurse, or physician assistant, a 34.5% increase from 2013 (p-value = .016). CONCLUSIONS: State Medicaid expansions in 2014 were associated with greater likelihoods of visits with a variety of office-based providers. The estimated effects are larger among newly eligible compared with previous estimates on broader populations of low-income adults. © Published 2017. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
Keywords:
Medicaid; Primary care; utilization of services
Mesh: See more »
Year: 2017
PMID: 29053183 PMCID: PMC6051968 DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.12793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Serv Res ISSN: 0017-9124 Impact factor: 3.402