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3371 The Devil is in the Details: Unbalanced Gains in Healthcare Access and Affordability in the Health Insurance Exchanges

机译:3371细节中的魔鬼:医疗保险交易所和医疗保险交易所承受能力的不平衡收益

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摘要

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Evaluate how access and affordability has changed before and after the implementation HIEs in three subpopulations. The subpopulations are individuals who are currently insured through the HIE but were previously: 1. Insured through Employment-based insurance (PEBI subpopulation) 2. Insured through Private Insurance (PPI subpopulation) and 3. Uninsured (PU subpopulation). The three access and affordability measures are: Outcome measure 1. Did not fill a prescription in the past year due to cost Outcome measure 2. Could not get needed medical exam in the past year due to cost and Outcome measure 3. Had problems paying medical bills in the past year. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We analyzed the de-identified public use data from the 2012 and 2015 Ohio Medicaid Assessment Survey (OMAS). Sponsored by the Ohio Department of Medicaid, Ohio Department of Health, and the Ohio State University, the OMAS is a representative cross-sectional survey of non-institutionalized Ohio residents, regardless of their Medicaid status. In order to “longitudinalize” the 2012 and 2015 cross-sectional data of the OMAS, we employed a propensity score-based approach. We started with the 2015 OMAS, and carefully characterized each of the PEBI, PPI, and PU subpopulations along 17 demographic, health utilization, health behavior, and health status covariates using a propensity score model. Then, we identified controls for the three subpopulations within the 2012 OMAS data using the propensity scores. Finally, we estimated the odds ratios for the three outcome measures between 2012 and 2015. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: In 2015 there were approximately 201,381 adults (unweighted count = 996) who were insured through the HIE in Ohio. Of those individuals, 17.7% fell into the PEBI subpopulation, 17.6% fell into the PPI subpopulation, and 53.3% fell into the PU subpopulation; the balance of the respondents (11.4%) reported previously having Medicaid, or “Other” insurance. There are several key differences in the covariates at baseline between the three subpopulations. In general, the PU subpopulation tended to younger, more minority, more socioeconomically disadvantaged, and more likely to not have a primary care provider compared to both the PEBI and PPI subpopulations. In the 2012 data, we were able to identify 170 controls for the PEBI subpopulation, 167 controls for the PPI subpopulation, and 516 controls for the PU subpopulation. Compared to 2012, in 2016 (after the implementation of the HIEs):. Outcome measure 1: The PEBI subpopulation was more likely to report not filling a prescription in the past year due to cost (there were no significant changes in the PPI or PU subpopulations). Outcome measure 2: The PEBI subpopulation was more likely to report not getting a needed medical exam or medical supplies in the past year due to cost. The PPI subpopulation was less likely to report not getting a needed medical exam or medical supplies in the past year due to cost. There were no significant changes for the PU subpopulation for this outcome measure. Outcome measure 3: There were no changes in the “had problems paying medical bill in the past year” outcome across the three subpopulations. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: This is among the most detailed studies of health insurance exchanges known to the investigators. Analyzing outcomes at the subpopulation level illustrates that there have been unbalanced gains in access and affordability as a result of the HIEs. In general, those who were previously insured through employer-based insurance saw their access and affordability decrease; those previously insured through private insurance saw modest increases to access and affordability; and perhaps most surprising, those that were previously uninsured saw no changes to their access and affordability. Future studies will incorporate 2017 OMAS data (when it becomes available) to see if these trends persist over time. During this time of rapid health systems and health policy change, our study adds an important contribution to the discussion surrounding how to best deliver highly effective and efficient health care.
机译:目标/特定目标:在三个子群体中,在实施HIE之前和之后,评估获取和负担能力的变化。这些子人群是目前通过HIE投保但之前曾受保的个人:1.通过基于职业的保险(PEBI子群体)投保2.通过私人保险(PPI的亚群体)投保和3.未投保(PU子群体)。三种获取和负担能力的措施是:成果措施1.由于费用原因,在过去的一年中未填写处方成果措施2.由于成本和结果措施,在过去的一年中无法获得所需的体检3.支付医疗费用时遇到问题过去一年的帐单。方法/研究人群:我们分析了来自2012年和2015年俄亥俄州医疗补助评估调查(OMAS)的不明身份的公共使用数据。 OMAS由俄亥俄医疗补助部,俄亥俄州卫生局和俄亥俄州立大学赞助,是对非住院俄亥俄州居民的代表性横断面调查,无论其医疗补助状况如何。为了“纵向化” OMAS的2012年和2015年横截面数据,我们采用了基于倾向得分的方法。我们从2015年的OMAS开始,并使用倾向性得分模型对17个人口统计,健康利用,健康行为和健康状况协变量中的PEBI,PPI和PU子群体进行了仔细的分类。然后,我们使用倾向得分在2012 OMAS数据中确定了三个亚群的对照。最后,我们估计了2012年至2015年这三种结局指标的比值比。结果/预期结果:2015年,通过俄亥俄州的HIE为大约201,381名成年人(未加权计数= 996)提供了保险。在这些个人中,有17.7%属于PEBI子群,17.6%属于PPI子群,53.3%属于PU子群;其余的受访者(11.4%)报告称曾经有医疗补助或“其他”保险。三个亚群之间的基线协变量存在几个关键差异。一般而言,与PEBI和PPI的亚人群相比,PU的亚人群倾向于更年轻,更少数,更不利于社会经济,并且更可能没有初级保健提供者。在2012年的数据中,我们能够确定170个PEBI亚群对照,167个PPI亚群对照和516个PU亚群对照。与2012年相比,2016年(实施HIE后):成果衡量标准1:由于成本(在过去一年中,PPI或PU子群没有显着变化),PEBI子群更有可能报告未填写处方。成果衡量指标2:由于成本原因,在过去的一年中,PEBI子群更有可能报告没有得到必要的体检或医疗用品。 PPI子群体在过去一年中不太可能报告由于成本原因没有进行必要的体检或医疗用品。对于该结果测量,PU亚群没有显着变化。成果衡量标准3:三个子群体的“过去一年在支付医疗费用方面存在问题”结果没有变化。讨论/意义:这是研究人员已知的最详细的健康保险交易研究。在亚人群水平上分析结果表明,由于HIE,获得和负担能力方面的收益不平衡。总的来说,那些以前通过雇主保险投保的人的可及性和可负担性下降了。那些以前通过私人保险投保的人的可及性和可负担性有所增加;也许最令人惊讶的是,那些以前没有保险的人没有看到他们获得和负担能力的任何变化。未来的研究将结合2017年OMAS数据(如果可用),以查看这些趋势是否随着时间的推移持续存在。在这个快速的卫生系统和卫生政策变化时期,我们的研究为有关如何最好地提供高效和高效的医疗保健的讨论做出了重要贡献。

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