Impacts of Early ACA Medicaid Expansions on Physician Participation

Author(s):  
Vilsa Curto ◽  
Monica Bhole
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-92
Author(s):  
Craig Garthwaite ◽  
John Graves ◽  
Tal Gross ◽  
Zeynal Karaca ◽  
Victoria Marone ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 107755872110158
Author(s):  
Priyanka Anand ◽  
Dora Gicheva

This article examines how the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansions affected the sources of health insurance coverage of undergraduate students in the United States. We show that the Affordable Care Act expansions increased the Medicaid coverage of undergraduate students by 5 to 7 percentage points more in expansion states than in nonexpansion states, resulting in 17% of undergraduate students in expansion states being covered by Medicaid postexpansion (up from 9% prior to the expansion). In contrast, the growth in employer and private direct coverage was 1 to 2 percentage points lower postexpansion for students in expansion states compared with nonexpansion states. Our findings demonstrate that policy efforts to expand Medicaid eligibility have been successful in increasing the Medicaid coverage rates for undergraduate students in the United States, but there is evidence of some crowd out after the expansions—that is, some students substituted their private and employer-sponsored coverage for Medicaid.


Author(s):  
Caroline K. Geiger ◽  
Benjamin D. Sommers ◽  
Summer S. Hawkins ◽  
Jessica L. Cohen

2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 246-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Schoen ◽  
Edmond F. Tipton ◽  
Thomas K. Houston ◽  
Ellen Funkhouser ◽  
Deborah A. Levine ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (11) ◽  
pp. 2943-2951
Author(s):  
Louis‐Philippe Beland ◽  
Jason Huh ◽  
Dongwoo Kim

2021 ◽  
pp. ASN.2020101511
Author(s):  
Rebecca Thorsness ◽  
Shailender Swaminathan ◽  
Yoojin Lee ◽  
Benjamin D. Sommers ◽  
Rajnish Mehrotra ◽  
...  

BackgroundLow-income individuals without health insurance have limited access to health care. Medicaid expansions may reduce kidney failure incidence by improving access to chronic disease care.MethodsUsing a difference-in-differences analysis, we examined the association between Medicaid expansion status under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the kidney failure incidence rate among all nonelderly adults, aged 19–64 years, in the United States, from 2012 through 2018. We compared changes in kidney failure incidence in states that implemented Medicaid expansions with concurrent changes in nonexpansion states during pre-expansion, early postexpansion (years 2 and 3 postexpansion), and later postexpansion (years 4 and 5 postexpansion).ResultsThe unadjusted kidney failure incidence rate increased in the early years of the study period in both expansion and nonexpansion states before stabilizing. After adjustment for population sociodemographic characteristics, Medicaid expansion status was associated with 2.20 fewer incident cases of kidney failure per million adults per quarter in the early postexpansion period (95% CI, −3.89 to −0.51) compared with nonexpansion status, a 3.07% relative reduction (95% CI, −5.43% to −0.72%). In the later postexpansion period, Medicaid expansion status was not associated with a statistically significant change in kidney failure incidence (−0.56 cases per million per quarter; 95% CI, −2.71 to 1.58) compared with nonexpansion status and the pre-expansion time period.ConclusionsThe ACA Medicaid expansion was associated with an initial reduction in kidney failure incidence among the entire, nonelderly, adult population in the United States; but the changes did not persist in the later postexpansion period. Further study is needed to determine the long-term association between Medicaid expansion and changes in kidney failure incidence.


Author(s):  
Sayeeda Rahman ◽  
Azim Majumder ◽  
Sami Shaban ◽  
Nuzhat Rahman ◽  
SM Moslehuddin Ahmed ◽  
...  

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