Back to Search Start Over

Increased Access to Cardiac Surgery Did Not Improve Outcomes: Early Look Into Medicaid Expansion

Authors :
Afshin Ehsan
Nawar Shara
Alexander Zeymo
Brian D. Cohen
James McDermott
Frank W. Sellke
Waddah B. Al-Refaie
Megan Elizabeth Bouchard
Neel R. Sodha
Source :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. 114:1637-1644
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Cardiac surgery utilization has increased after passage of the Affordable Care Act. This multistate study examined whether changes in access after Medicaid expansion (ME) have led to improved outcomes, overall and particularly among ethnoracial minorities.State Inpatient Databases were used to identify nonelderly adults (ages 18-64 years) who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting, aortic valve replacement, mitral valve replacement, or mitral valve repair in 3 expansion (Kentucky, New Jersey, Maryland) vs 2 nonexpansion states (North Carolina, Florida) from 2012 to 2015. Linear and logistic interrupted time series were used with 2-way interactions and adjusted for patient-level, hospital-level, and county-level factors to compare trends and instantaneous changes at the point of ME implementation (quarter 1 of 2014) for mortality, length of stay, and elective status. Interrupted time series models estimated expansion effect, overall and by race-ethnicity.Analysis included 22 038 cardiac surgery patients from expansion states and 33 190 from nonexpansion states. In expansion states, no significant trend changes were observed for mortality (odds ratio, 1.01; P = .83) or length of stay (β = -0.05, P = .20), or for elective surgery (odds ratio, 1.00; P = .91). There were similar changes seen in nonexpansion states. Among ethnoracial minorities, ME did not impact outcomes or elective status.Despite an increase in cardiac surgery utilization after ME, outcomes remained unchanged in the early period after implementation, overall and among ethnoracial minorities. Future research is needed to confirm long-term trends and examine reasons behind this lack of improved outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
00034975
Volume :
114
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....de614bbba1d90a0795bb7cd78bd964e9