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Access for low-income children: is health insurance enough? | LitMetric

Access for low-income children: is health insurance enough?

Pediatrics

Mathematica Policy Research, Inc., Abt Associates Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.

Published: June 1999

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 aimed to expand health insurance for uninsured low-income children, leading to the Medicaid Extension Demonstration which tested different healthcare delivery models.
  • Two surveys were conducted with parents of children in the demonstration and those who were eligible but not participating, analyzing how access to care differed among the programs.
  • Results showed that children in managed care had better access to care and fewer unmet needs, implying that simply having insurance is not enough; the setup of the healthcare system, including medical homes, is crucial for effective care access.

Article Abstract

Objective: The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 authorizes $20 billion for states to expand health insurance coverage among uninsured low-income children. This study identifies lessons learned from the Medicaid Extension Demonstration, which was authorized by Congress to experiment with innovative approaches to providing health care coverage for low-income children. The three programs compare and contrast a variety of features that may enhance or detract from access, including a traditional Medicaid expansion, a private indemnity model, and a comprehensive managed care delivery system.

Methodology: Two waves of telephone surveys were conducted with a sample of parents of children participating in the Medicaid Extension Demonstration, and a comparison group of parents of children who were eligible but not participating. Descriptive and multivariate analyses were conducted to determine the impact of the demonstration on access to care.

Results: Compared with those who were uninsured, children in the managed care program were more likely to have a medical home and a physician visit and were less likely to have an emergency room visit, and had lower levels of unmet need. Outcomes across the other two demonstration programs were less favorable.

Conclusions: This study suggests that simply providing a Medicaid card or private indemnity insurance card is not enough to ensure access to care. Future initiatives also need to consider the structure of the delivery system, especially the availability of a medical home (with adequate after-hours care), as well as the impact of discontinuous insurance coverage on access to and continuity of care.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.103.6.1167DOI Listing

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