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			 To examine home health agency quality by insurance type, researchers 
			analyzed data on almost 4.4 million home health admissions for 
			Medicare beneficiaries in 2015. 
 Three quarters of the study population had traditional Medicare 
			coverage, while about 17% were in high-quality Medicare Advantage 
			plans based on Medicare's own five-star rating system and 8% were in 
			low-quality Medicare Advantage plans.
 
 Overall, 17% of traditional Medicare members received care from 
			low-quality home health agencies, compared with 23.5% of people in 
			low-quality Medicare Advantage plans and 18.3% of those in 
			high-quality Medicare Advantage plans.
 
 More Medicare Advantage members may end up with low-quality home 
			health agencies because they can only use agencies that are covered 
			as part of their insurance network, said Margot Schwartz, a 
			researcher at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, who led 
			the study.
 
			
			 
			
 "Traditional Medicare beneficiaries are able to select and receive 
			care from any Medicare-certified home health agency," Schwartz said 
			by email. "The limited networks in Medicare Advantage may result in 
			these beneficiaries receiving care from lower-quality home health 
			agencies."
 
 Some higher-quality home health agencies may also opt not to 
			participate in Medicare Advantage plans because of low reimbursement 
			rates, said Momotazur Rahman, also at Brown University and the 
			study's senior author.
 
			"Payment rates by Medicare Advantage plans to home health agencies 
			are much lower compared to traditional Medicare payment rates," 
			Rahman said by email. "This may drive highly-rated home health 
			agencies away from the Medicare Advantage patients."
 
			
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			The disparity in home health agency quality may impact a growing 
			number of Americans because enrollment in Medicare Advantage plans 
			is on the rise.
 The proportion of Medicare members enrolled in Medicare Advantage 
			increased from 13% in 2004 to 33% in 2017, researchers note in JAMA 
			Network Open.
 
 Roughly half of the Medicare beneficiaries who receive home health 
			care services are over 75 years old, and they are all homebound 
			because of severe illness or functional limitations that may be 
			exacerbated by low-quality care, the study team notes.
 
 People in the study who enrolled in low-quality Medicare Advantage 
			plans were more likely to be nonwhite and poor.
 
 Patients with traditional Medicare were also more likely to receive 
			care from home health agencies with the highest quality marks. About 
			30% of traditional Medicare members received care from top-quality 
			home health agencies, compared with 27% of patients with 
			high-quality Medicare Advantage plans and 23% of people with 
			low-quality Medicare Advantage plans.
 
 The study wasn't designed to prove whether or how the type of 
			Medicare coverage people had directly impacted the quality of home 
			health care they received, and it also didn't assess any resulting 
			health outcomes.
 
 Medicare rates home health agencies on a scale of one to five stars, 
			with scores below 3 stars indicating low quality and above 3.5 stars 
			indicating better quality (https://bit.ly/2m225jK).
 
 Medicare also ranks Medicare Advantage plans by zip code with a 
			five-star rating system.
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2lUKx91 JAMA Network Open, online September 
			4, 2019
 
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