1. Do quality improvement strategies for Medicaid enrollees differ in Medicaid-dominant versus commercial managed care organizations?
- Author
-
Felt-Lisk S and Gold MR
- Subjects
- Accreditation, Adult, Capitation Fee, Child, Child Health Services standards, Female, Health Care Surveys, Health Promotion statistics & numerical data, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Managed Care Programs statistics & numerical data, Medicaid statistics & numerical data, Ownership, Pregnancy, Preventive Health Services statistics & numerical data, Private Sector statistics & numerical data, State Health Plans standards, State Health Plans statistics & numerical data, United States, Health Services Accessibility, Managed Care Programs standards, Medicaid standards, Private Sector standards, Total Quality Management
- Abstract
Objective: To examine whether it matters, in terms of quality improvement initiatives and access to commercial networks, whether states contract with Medicaid-dominant or commercial managed care plans., Study Design: A 2001 telephone survey of Medicaid managed care plans in 11 states that together account for about half of the national Medicaid managed care enrollment., Methods: The survey was developed in consultation with a panel of individuals knowledgeable about Medicaid managed care. Information on plan characteristics and network design was obtained from the plan CEO or person most knowledgeable about the topics. The rest of the data were obtained from the person the CEO named as most knowledgeable about quality improvement initiatives., Results: Surveyed plans reported an extensive array of quality improvement initiatives. Programs are in many ways similar across Medicaid-dominant and commercial plans. Medicaid-dominant plans tend to specialize more in conditions of greatest priority to Medicaid beneficiaries. Commercial plans tend to develop programs for accreditation by the National Committee for Quality Assurance, and to limit measurement specific to the Medicaid population. They draw on their commercial networks to support the Medicaid product line, but how much they expand provider access is not clear. Both types of programs face barriers that limit the effectiveness of the plans' initiatives., Conclusion: This study shows extensive development of quality initiatives in Medicaid managed care plans, with limited differences across Medicaid-dominant and commercial plans.
- Published
- 2003