4.4 Article

Does Medicaid coverage of Medicare cost sharing affect physician care for dual-eligible Medicare beneficiaries?

Journal

HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH
Volume 56, Issue 3, Pages 528-539

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.13650

Keywords

Affordable Care Act; dual eligibles; physician incentives

Funding

  1. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality [K01HS026727, K01HS026980]
  2. University of Pittsburgh Pepper Older Americans Independence Center [P30 AG024827]

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The study assessed changes in physicians' provision of care to duals in response to a policy that required Medicaid to fully pay Medicare's cost sharing for office visits with these patients. The results showed that physicians' provision of care to low-income Medicare beneficiaries may not be responsive to short-run payment changes.
Objective To assess changes in physicians' provision of care to duals (low-income individuals with Medicare and Medicaid) in response to a policy that required Medicaid to fully pay Medicare's cost sharing for office visits with these patients. This policy-a provision of the Affordable Care Act-effectively increased payments for office visits with duals by 0%-20%, depending on the state, in 2013 and 2014. Data Sources Fee-for-service claims for a 5% random sample of Medicare beneficiaries in 2010-2016. Study Design We conducted a difference-in-differences analysis to compare changes in office visits among Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries (QMBs)-the largest subpopulation of duals for whom payment rates were affected by this policy-to changes among other low-income Medicare beneficiaries for whom payment rates were unaffected (pooled across all states). Next, we conducted a triple-differences analysis that compared changes between QMBs and other low-income beneficiaries in 33 states with payment rate increases of approximately 20% to analogous changes in 14 states without payment increases. Data Collection The study included administrative Medicare enrollment and claims data for QMBs and a comparison group of other low-income Medicare beneficiaries (1 914 073 beneficiary-years from 2010 to 2016). Principal Findings Nationally, we did not find a differential increase in office visits among QMBs versus other low-income beneficiaries that coincided with this payment change. In the triple-differences analysis, we did not observe a greater increase in visits among QMBs vs other low-income beneficiaries in states where the policy resulted in large (approximately 20%) increases in payment rates vs states where payment rates were unaffected (triple-differences estimate: -0.12 annual visits, 95% CI: -0.28, 0.04; P = 0.15). Conclusions Physicians' provision of care to low-income Medicare beneficiaries may not be responsive to short-run payment changes.

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