Impact of the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion on emergency department high utilizers with ambulatory care sensitive conditions: A cross-sectional study.
Recommended Citation
Gingold DB, Pierre-Mathieu R, Cole B, Miller AC, and Khaldun JS. Impact of the Affordable Care Act Medicaid expansion on emergency department high utilizers with ambulatory care sensitive conditions: A cross-sectional study. Am J Emerg Med 2017.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-1-2017
Publication Title
The American journal of emergency medicine
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The effect of the Affordable Care Act on emergency department (ED) high utilizers has not yet been thoroughly studied. We sought to determine the impact of changes in insurance eligibility following the 2014 Medicaid expansion on ED utilization for ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC) by high ED utilizers in an urban safety net hospital.
METHODS: High utilizers were defined as patients with ≥4 visits in the 6 months before their most recent visit in the study period (July-December before and after Maryland's Medicaid expansion in January 2014). A differences-in-differences approach using logistic regression was used to investigate if differences between high and low utilizer cohorts changed from before and after the expansion.
RESULTS: During the study period, 726 (4.1%) out of 17,795 unique patients in 2013 and 380 (2.4%) of 16,458 during the same period in 2014 were high utilizers (p-value < 0.001). ACSC-associated visit predicted being a high utilizer in 2013 (OR 1.66 (95% CI [1.37, 2.01])) and 2014 (OR 1.65 (95% CI [1.27, 2.15])) but this was not different between years (OR ratio 0.99, 95% CI [0.72, 1.38], p -value 0.97).
CONCLUSION: Although the proportion of high utilizers decreased significantly after Maryland's Medicaid expansion, ACSC-associated ED visits by high ED utilizers were unaffected.
Medical Subject Headings
Adult; Ambulatory Care; Cross-Sectional Studies; Emergency Service, Hospital; Fees and Charges; Female; Health Services Accessibility; Humans; Insurance Coverage; Male; Maryland; Medicaid; Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; Retrospective Studies; United States
PubMed ID
28110978
Volume
35
Issue
5
First Page
737
Last Page
742