Medicaid Expansion And Marketplace Eligibility Both Increased Coverage, With Trade-Offs In Access, Affordability.

Health Aff (Millwood)

Sandra L. Decker ( ) is a senior fellow in the Division of Research and Modeling, Center for Financing, Access and Cost Trends, at AHRQ.

Published: December 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA) allowed states to expand Medicaid in 2014, providing low-income adults with increased access to health insurance and healthcare services depending on their state's decision to expand Medicaid or not.
  • Data from 2008-2015 show that both groups in expansion and nonexpansion states saw significant declines in uninsurance rates (22 and 18 percentage points, respectively) and improvements in access to care.
  • However, while those in expansion states had lower out-of-pocket costs, they encountered more challenges accessing physician care compared to those in nonexpansion states.

Article Abstract

Affordable Care Act (ACA) provisions implemented in 2014 provide a valuable case study regarding the merits of using public versus subsidized private insurance to help low-income people obtain and finance health care. In particular, nonelderly adults with incomes of 100-138 percent of the federal poverty level gained Medicaid eligibility if they lived in states that implemented the ACA's Medicaid expansion, whereas those in nonexpansion states became eligible for subsidized Marketplace coverage. Using data for 2008-15 from the National Health Interview Survey, we found that as of 2015, adults with family incomes in this range had experienced large declines in uninsurance rates in both expansion and nonexpansion states (the adjusted declines were 22 percentage points and 18 percentage points, respectively). Adults in expansion and nonexpansion states also experienced similar increases in having a usual source of care and primary care visits, and similar reductions in delayed receipt of medical care due to cost. There were, however, important differences: Adults in expansion states experienced larger reductions in out-of-pocket spending but also faced greater difficulty accessing physician care relative to adults in nonexpansion states.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2017.0830DOI Listing

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