AI Article Synopsis

  • In 2015, lung cancer screening became covered without out-of-pocket costs, but a study found that enrolling in deductible plans led to lower utilization of these services.
  • Researchers analyzed data over four years and found that deductible plan enrollees were significantly less likely to receive necessary steps for lung cancer screening, like clinician visits and screening orders.
  • The study highlights that those in deductible plans may avoid preventive care despite free services, suggesting the need for improved outreach to encourage screening utilization.

Article Abstract

Background: In 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and commercial insurance plans began covering lung cancer screening (LCS) without patient cost-sharing for all plans. We explore the impact of enrolling into a deductible plan on the utilization of LCS services despite having no out-of-pocket cost requirement.

Methods: This retrospective study analyzed data from the Population-based Research to Optimize the Screening Process Lung Consortium. Our cohort included non-Medicare LCS-eligible individuals enrolled in managed care organizations between February 5, 2015, and February 28, 2019. We estimate a series of sequential logistic regression models examining utilization across the sequence of events required for baseline LCS. We report the marginal effects of enrollment into deductible plans compared with enrollment in no-deductible plans.

Results: The total effect of deductible plan enrollment was a 1.8 percentage-point (PP) decrease in baseline LCS. Sequential logistic regression results that explore each transition separately indicate deductible plan enrollment was associated with a 4.3 PP decrease in receipt of clinician visit, a 1.7 PP decrease in receipt of LCS order, and a 7.0 PP decrease in receipt of baseline LCS. Reductions persisted across all observable races and ethnicities.

Conclusions: These findings suggest individuals enrolled in deductible plans are more likely to forgo preventive LCS services despite requiring no out-of-pocket costs. This result may indicate that increased cost-sharing is associated with suboptimal choices to forgo recommended LCS. Alternatively, this effect may indicate individuals enrolling into deductible plans prefer less health care utilization. Patient outreach interventions at the health plan level may improve LCS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10840830PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MLR.0000000000001903DOI Listing

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