Following Uninsured Patients Through Medicaid Expansion: Ambulatory Care Use and Diagnosed Conditions

AbstractPurposeThe Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has improved access to health insurance, yet millions remain uninsured. Many patients who remain uninsured access care at community health centers (CHCs); however, little is known about their health conditions and health care use. W...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of family medicine 2019-07, Vol.17 (4), p.336-344
Hauptverfasser: Huguet, Nathalie, PhD, Valenzuela, Steele, MS, Marino, Miguel, PhD, Angier, Heather, PhD, MPH, Hatch, Brigit, MD, MPH, Hoopes, Megan, MPH, DeVoe, Jennifer E., MD, DPhil
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:AbstractPurposeThe Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) has improved access to health insurance, yet millions remain uninsured. Many patients who remain uninsured access care at community health centers (CHCs); however, little is known about their health conditions and health care use. We assessed ambulatory care use and diagnosed health conditions among a cohort of CHC patients uninsured before enactment of the ACA (pre-ACA: January 1, 2012 to December 31, 2013) and followed them after enactment (post-ACA: January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2015).MethodsThis retrospective cohort analysis used electronic health record data from CHCs in 11 US states that expanded Medicaid eligibility. We assessed ambulatory care visits and documented health conditions among a cohort of 138,246 patients (aged 19 to 64 years) who were uninsured pre-ACA and either remained uninsured, gained Medicaid, gained other health insurance, or did not have a visit post-ACA. We estimated adjusted predicted probabilities of ambulatory care use using an ordinal logistic mixed-effects regression model.ResultsPost-ACA, 20.9% of patients remained uninsured, 15.0% gained Medicaid, 12.4% gained other insurance, and 51.7% did not have a visit. The majority of patients had ≥1 diagnosed health condition. The adjusted proportion of patients with high use (≥6 visits over 2 years) increased from pre-ACA to post-ACA among those who gained Medicaid (pre-ACA: 23%, post-ACA: 34%, P
ISSN:1544-1709
1544-1717
DOI:10.1370/afm.2385