Expanded
Medicaid may translate into fewer unpaid hospital bills
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[June 22, 2016]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - U.S. hospitals may be
getting paid for more of the care they actually provide thanks to the
Affordable Care Act, if research from Michigan reflects the situation
around the country.
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While the study didn't look directly at hospital finances,
researchers found that the proportion of uninsured adults discharged
from Michigan hospitals fell after public insurance options expanded
in 2014.
"What we found is that the overwhelming majority of hospitals
experienced a decrease in the proportion of uninsured patients and
an increase in Medicaid covered patients," said lead author Dr.
Matthew Davis, deputy director of Institute for Healthcare Policy
and Innovation at the University of Michigan Health System in Ann
Arbor.
Under the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, some U.S.
states - including Michigan - expanded Medicaid, which is the joint
federal and state insurance program for the poor.
Previous studies showed many people who gained health insurance
through the law were previously uninsured, Davis told Reuters
Health.
For the new study, he and his colleagues analyzed data on young
adults discharged from 130 Michigan hospitals before and after
Medicaid became more broadly available in 2014.
About 6 percent of young adults discharged at those hospitals
between April and December before the Medicaid expansion were
uninsured, compared to about 2 percent during those months in 2014,
the authors reported in JAMA.
The proportion of discharged young adults on Medicaid rose from 23
percent in 2012 and 24 percent in 2013 to 30 percent in 2014.
There was a small decline in the number of people discharged with
private or other insurance, they found.
The researchers were surprised at how uniform the impact of Medicaid
expansion seemed to be in hospitals across Michigan, Davis said.
"This impact wasn’t limited to urban areas or population centers, or
safety net hospitals," he said.
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According to Davis, past research shows that decreases in the number
of uninsured patients are tied to decreases in healthcare that goes
unpaid for.
"As we have more and more years of the Affordable Care Act that have
provided expanded coverage for millions of Americans, it’s going to
be important to understand how that coverage translates into
positive health," he said.
"Coverage through insurance plans and programs like Medicaid is most
(needed) when our health is at its worst and we need to be
hospitalized," he said. "Yet, that coverage is also essential in
times when our health is better and we need to be focused on
preventing the next illness rather than just responding to it."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/WddS8K JAMA, online June 21, 2016.
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