ACA后的医疗补助扩张:急诊科的治疗强度和计费

S. Danagoulian, A. Janke, P. Levy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:扩大医疗保险覆盖范围,除了增加获得医疗保健的机会外,还会影响医疗提供商的收入。虽然医疗支出的预测包括由于获得机会的改善而增加的使用率,但不包括提供者做法的变化和对扩大保险费用的计费错误估计。目的:评估在平价医疗法案(ACA)授权医疗补助扩大到急诊科(ED)后,医疗服务提供者实践和计费的变化。我们分析了出院记录上的程序和诊断的总数,然后我们重点关注两种诊断类别来检查特定测试的使用。设计:我们使用2013-2014年的州急诊科数据库(SEDD)分析了六个州的18,872,744例出院病例,其中四个州选择扩大医疗补助,两个州没有扩大医疗补助。使用差异中的差异分析,我们比较了患者、访问和邮政编码特征的兴趣调整结果。结果:2014年,与非扩张州相比,扩张州每次就诊的手术次数增加了0.27次(95% CI, 0.09-0.45),而每次就诊的诊断次数减少了0.098次(95% CI, -0.22 - 0.03)。关注腹部和盆腔症状的诊断,我们发现一致的证据表明腹部和骨盆超声的使用减少(-0.0076,95% CI, -0.01- -0.002),一些证据表明腹部和骨盆ct的使用减少(-0.0112,95% CI, -0.01- -0.001)。对于上呼吸道症状的诊断,我们发现了检测之间替代的证据:心电图的使用减少了3.2个百分点(95% CI, -0.04 - -0.02),胸片的使用增加了1.8个百分点(95% CI, 0.01-0.03)。虽然这些幅度看起来很小,但CMS对心电图的平均报销为11.76美元,x光的平均报销为43.32美元,几乎增加了四倍的成本。结论:我们发现,医疗补助计划的扩张导致急诊室每次就诊的次数增加了2.7%至4.0%。这一增长转化为2014年在四个扩张的州进行的1,057,169次额外手术,这些州的医疗支出估计增加了2.48亿美元,其中9580万美元由医疗补助计划支付,这一成本未被当前的政策预测所涵盖。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Medicaid Expansion After the ACA: Intensity of Treatment and Billing in Emergency Departments
Importance: Expanding health insurance coverage, in addition to increasing access to healthcare, affects medical provider revenue. While projections of medical expenditure include increased utilization attributable to improved access, they do not include changes in provider practice and billing misestimating the cost of insurance expansion. Objective: To evaluate changes to provider practice and billing following the Affordable Care Act (ACA) mandated Medicaid expansion in the emergency department (ED). We analyze total number of procedures and diagnoses on discharge records, then we focus on two diagnostic categories to examine use of specific tests. Design: We analyze 18,872,744 discharges in six states, four of which chose to expand Medicaid, and two which did not, using State Emergency Department Databases (SEDD) for 2013-2014. Using difference-in-differences analysis, we compared outcomes of interest adjusting for patient, visit, and zip code characteristics. Results: The number of procedures in expanding states increased by 0.27 per visit (95% CI, 0.09-0.45), while the number of diagnoses declined by 0.098 per visit (95% CI, -0.22 – 0.03) in 2014 compared to non-expanding states. Focusing on diagnoses of abdominal and pelvic symptoms, we find consistent evidence of decreased use of ultrasounds of abdomen and pelvis (-0.0076, 95% CI, -0.01- -0.002), and some evidence of decreased use of CTs of abdomen and pelvis (-0.0112, 95% CI, -0.01 - -0.001). For diagnoses of upper respiratory symptoms, we find evidence of substitution between tests: 3.2 percentage point decrease in use of ECGs (95% CI, -0.04 - -0.02), and a parallel 1.8 percentage point increase in use of chest x-rays (95% CI, 0.01-0.03). While these magnitudes appear small, the average CMS reimbursement for ECGs is $11.76 and for x-rays is $43.32, an almost four-fold increase in cost. Conclusion: We find that the Medicaid expansion led to between 2.7% to 4.0% increase in number of procedures per visit in the ED. This increase translates into 1,057,169 extra procedures performed in the four expanding states studied here in 2014, adding an estimated cost of $248 million to health expenditures in these states, of which $95.8 million was paid by Medicaid, a cost not captured by current policy projections.
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