All states participate in Medicaid, a partnership with the federal
government to provide some insurance coverage to low-income people.
The Affordable Care Act would have expanded Medicaid coverage to all
Americans under age 65 whose family income is at or below 133
percent of federal poverty guidelines, but only 32 states accepted
this plan.
Nineteen states did not expand Medicaid coverage. Six of those -
Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, and New Hampshire –
instead approved alternative plans to make use of the federal funds
for Medicaid expansion.
“There’s really a huge difference for healthcare of low income
adults,” said lead author Dr. Benjamin D. Sommers of the Harvard T.H.
Chan School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
For the new study, the researchers tracked how health and healthcare
changed for low-income residents of three states taking different
approaches between 2013 and 2015.
Low-income adults in Texas, Kentucky and Arkansas reported their
access to primary care, specialty care, medications, use of the
emergency department and outpatient care, blood sugar and
cholesterol testing, annual checkups, depression and overall health.
Kentucky expanded Medicaid, Arkansas used Medicaid funds to purchase
insurance for low-income residents on the private market, and Texas
did not expand coverage at all.
By 2015, the uninsured rate in Kentucky and Arkansas was 22 percent
lower than in Texas. Residents with expanded coverage reported fewer
skipped medications due to cost, less out of pocket spending and
less emergency department use. Those residents also had improvements
in diabetes screening, chronic disease care, quality of care and
likelihood of reporting overall “excellent health.”
There was more private coverage in Arkansas and more Medicaid
coverage in Kentucky, but no other notable differences in healthcare
between the two states, the researchers reported in JAMA Internal
Medicine online August 8.
“It didn’t turn out to matter much whether you expanded or used a
‘private option’,” as long as coverage increased, Sommers told
Reuters Health by phone.
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“Some of it is related to the politics of the state, how people feel
about public vs. private plans,” he said. Private insurance pays
doctors higher rates than Medicaid, which may be attractive to some
states.
It’s still not clear if alternative expansion plans will work in the
long run, said Joel C. Cantor of Rutgers University in New
Brunswick, New Jersey, who coauthored a commentary on the new
findings.
“The unanswered question is whether it’s going to cost the
government more, which ultimately would mean they couldn’t be
continued,” Cantor told Reuters Health by phone.
But it is worth testing different approaches to see what works, he
said.
Other studies have found that expanding Medicaid has a positive
impact on a state’s economy and employment numbers, he said.
“From the patient’s perspective there doesn’t seem to be a big
difference,” Sommers said. “The message here really is for state
policy makers and advocates in states that have not expanded
coverage.”
“People who have insurance feel better,” Sommers said. “Any kind of
expansion of coverage is a major improvement regardless of method.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2aM6eAM
JAMA Intern Med 2016.
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