Is the affordable care act medicaid expansion associated with receipt of heart failure guideline-directed medical therapy by race and ethnicity?

Uninsurance is a known contributor to racial/ethnic health inequities. Insurance is often needed for prescriptions and follow-up appointments. Therefore, we determined whether the Affordable Care Act(ACA) Medicaid Expansion was associated with increased receipt of guideline-directed medical treatmen...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American heart journal 2022-02, Vol.244, p.135-148
Hauptverfasser: Breathett, Khadijah K., Xu, Haolin, Sweitzer, Nancy K., Calhoun, Elizabeth, Matsouaka, Roland A., Yancy, Clyde W., Fonarow, Gregg C., DeVore, Adam D., Bhatt, Deepak L., Peterson, Pamela N.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Uninsurance is a known contributor to racial/ethnic health inequities. Insurance is often needed for prescriptions and follow-up appointments. Therefore, we determined whether the Affordable Care Act(ACA) Medicaid Expansion was associated with increased receipt of guideline-directed medical treatment(GDMT) at discharge among patients hospitalized with heart failure(HF) by race/ethnicity. Using Get With The Guidelines-HF registry, logistic regression was used to assess odds of receiving GDMT(HF medications; education; follow-up appointment) in early vs non-adopter states before(2012 – 2013) and after ACA Medicaid Expansion(2014 – 2019) within each race/ethnicity, accounting for patient-level covariates and within-hospital clustering. We tested for an interaction(p-int) between GDMT and pre/post Medicaid Expansion time periods. Among 271,606 patients(57.5% early adopter, 42.5% non-adopter), 65.5% were White, 22.8% African American, 8.9% Hispanic, and 2.9% Asian race/ethnicity. Independent of ACA timing, Hispanic patients were more likely to receive all GDMT for residing in early adopter states compared to non-adopter states (P
ISSN:0002-8703
1097-6744
DOI:10.1016/j.ahj.2021.11.011