1. Medicaid expansion associated with no change in emergency department use across racial and ethnic groups
- Author
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Hanchate, Amresh D., Strackman, Braden W., Lin, Mengyun, Paasche-Orlow, Michael K., and Lasser, Karen E.
- Subjects
Medical care -- Utilization ,Hospitals -- Emergency service ,Medicaid ,Emergency medicine ,Health insurance ,Business ,Health care industry - Abstract
Objective: To estimate changes in the emergency department (ED) visit rate, hospitalization share of ED visits, and ED visit volumes associated with Medicaid expansion among Hispanic, Black, and White adults. Data Collection/Extraction Methods: For the population of adults aged 26-64 with no insurance or Medicaid coverage, we obtained census population and ED visit counts during 2010-2018 in nine expansion and five nonexpansion states. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was the annual number of ED visits per 100 adults ('ED rate'). The secondary outcomes were the share of ED visits leading to hospitalization, total number ('volumes') of all ED visits, ED visits leading to discharge ('treat-and-release') and ED visits leading to hospitalization ('transfer-to-inpatient'), and the share of the study population with Medicaid ('Medicaid share'). Study Design: An event-study difference in differences design that contrasts pre-versus post-expansion changes in outcomes in Medicaid expansion and nonexpansion states. Principal Findings: In 2013, the ED rate was 92.6, 34.4, and 59.2 ED visits among Black, Hispanic, and White adults, respectively. The expansion was associated with no change in ED rate in all three groups in each of the five post-expansion years. We found that expansion was associated with no change in the hospitalization share of ED visits and the volume of all ED visits, treat-and-release ED visits, and transfer-to-inpatient ED visits. The expansion was associated with an 11.7% annual increase (95% CI, 2.7%-21.2%) in the Medicaid share of Hispanic adults, but no significant change among Black adults (3.8%; 95% CI, -0.04% to 7.7%). Conclusion: ACA Medicaid expansion was associated with no changes in the rate of ED visits among Black, Hispanic, and White adults. Expanding Medicaid eligibility may not change ED use, including among Black and Hispanic subgroups. KEYWORDS Affordable Care Act, ED to hospitalization, emergency department use, ethnicity, Medicaid expansion, race What is known on this topic * Insurance expansion may lead to an increase (due to reduced cost-related barriers) or decrease (due to expanded outpatient care access) in ED use. * ACA Medicaid expansion was associated with a larger decrease in uninsurance rate among Black and Hispanic adults than among White adults. * Baseline level of ED visit rate is higher among Black adults relative to White adults. What this study adds * Among adults aged 26-64 with no insurance or Medicaid coverage, expansion was associated with no change in ED rate among Black, Hispanic, and White groups in each of the five post-expansion years. * Expansion was associated with no change in the volume of ED visits and in the proportion of ED visits that led to hospitalization. * Expansion was associated with an increase in Medicaid share among Hispanic adults but not Black adults., 1 | INTRODUCTION The complex association between the lack of health insurance and emergency department (ED) use has come under renewed attention following the Affordable Care Act (ACA)'s Medicaid expansion. [...]
- Published
- 2023
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