23 results match your criteria: "Institute for Medicaid Innovation[Affiliation]"

Background: Community doulas are perinatal health workers who provide peer education, resource navigation, and support during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period. Evidence suggests that doulas improve the experience of care, reduce cesarean birth, and improve breastfeeding outcomes. However, people with low incomes cannot access affordable community doula support in most states due to lack of insurance reimbursement.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This study investigates the link between mental health and substance use disorders and adverse outcomes for infants, such as prematurity and low birthweight, analyzing data from over 125,000 birth certificates and millions of insurance claims.
  • - Findings reveal that 13.4% of infants faced adverse outcomes, with 21.5% of birthing individuals reporting mental health issues and 8.7% having substance use disorders; both were associated with increased risks across various racial and ethnic groups.
  • - The research emphasizes the need for improved policies and clinical practices aimed at the early identification and treatment of these disorders during pregnancy to mitigate risks to infant health.
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The relationship between physical comorbidities and postpartum hospital readmission is well studied, with less research regarding the impact of mental health conditions on postpartum readmission. Using hospital discharge data (2016-2019) from the Hospital Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Readmissions Database ( = 12,222,654 weighted), we evaluated the impact of mental health conditions (0, 1, 2, and ≥3), as well as five individual conditions (anxiety, depressive, bipolar, schizophrenic, and traumatic/stress-related conditions) on readmission within 42 days, 1-7 days ("early"), and 8-42 days ("late") of hospitalization for birth. In adjusted analyses, the rate of 42-day readmission was 2.

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Opportunities for psychologists to advance health equity: Using liberation psychology to identify key lessons from 17 years of praxis.

Am Psychol

April 2023

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Advancing Health Equity: Leading Care, Payment, and Systems Transformation Program, Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago.

Health and health care inequities persist because the efforts to eliminate them have ignored structural racism, typically using a power neutral approach to diagnose and solve the problem. Critical theory can address many of the conceptual weaknesses of current approaches, help identify how racism operates in health care, and open the door for more effective individual employee and organizational actions to advance health equity. We apply Martín-Baró's (1996) liberation psychology to lessons we learned through implementing a transdisciplinary national health and health care equity program.

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Background: Reducing health inequities in marginalized populations, including people with Medicaid insurance, requires care transformation to address medical and social needs that is supported and incentivized by tailored payment methods. Collaboration across health care stakeholders is essential to overcome health system fragmentation and implement sustainable reform in the United States (U.S.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examined data from the National Center for Health Statistics (2016-2020) to analyze differences in low birthweight and prematurity across various racial and ethnic groups.
  • Significant disparities were found, with rates of low birthweight being 2.3 times higher among certain "multiple race" categories.
  • The findings highlight the importance of detailed data collection to better understand and tackle the underlying causes of these health inequities among infants.
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The objective of this technical report is to provide clinicians with evidence-based, actionable information upon which to make assessment and treatment decisions for children and adolescents with obesity. In addition, this report will provide an evidence base to inform clinical practice guidelines for the management and treatment of overweight and obesity in children and adolescents. To this end, the goal of this report was to identify all relevant studies to answer 2 overarching key questions: (KQ1) "What are clinically based, effective treatments for obesity?" and (KQ2) "What is the risk of comorbidities among children with obesity?" See Appendix 1 for the conceptual framework and a priori key questions.

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The objective of this technical report is to provide clinicians with actionable evidence-based information upon which to make treatment decisions. In addition, this report will provide an evidence base on which to inform clinical practice guidelines for the management and treatment of overweight and obesity in children and adolescents. To this end, the goal of this report was to identify all relevant studies to answer 2 overarching key questions: (KQ1) "What are effective clinically based treatments for obesity?" and (KQ2) "What is the risk of comorbidities among children with obesity?" See Appendix 1 for the conceptual framework and a priori Key Questions.

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Policy Opportunities To Improve Prevention, Diagnosis, And Treatment Of Perinatal Mental Health Conditions.

Health Aff (Millwood)

October 2021

Kara Zivin is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, a research career scientist at the Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Healthcare System, and a senior health researcher at Mathematica, all in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

One in five pregnant or postpartum people has a diagnosed mood or anxiety disorder, which are the most common mental health illnesses that occur during the perinatal period. Untreated perinatal mental health conditions, encompassing pregnancy and the first five years of a child's life, carry a societal burden of $14 billion per year in the US. This overview article describes the prevalence of perinatal mental health conditions; the implications of those conditions; and associated barriers to screening, treatment, and bias associated with mental health conditions.

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Mental Health Conditions Increase Severe Maternal Morbidity By 50 Percent And Cost $102 Million Yearly In The United States.

Health Aff (Millwood)

October 2021

Jennifer E. Moore is the founding executive director of the Institute for Medicaid Innovation and an assistant research professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Michigan Medical School, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Perinatal mental health disorders are increasingly acknowledged as contributors to adverse maternal outcomes. We analyzed data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project National Inpatient Sample (2016 and 2017) to estimate hospitalization cost, length-of-stay, and severe maternal morbidity associated with perinatal mental health disorders overall, as well as stratified by payer and by specific mental health category. We found that people with mental health disorders had $458 higher costs per delivery hospitalization and 50 percent higher rates of severe maternal morbidity compared with people without mental health disorders.

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Opportunities to Support Optimal Health for Children in Medicaid Beyond the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Am J Public Health

March 2021

Kelli DePriest, Sandra Hassink, Kim Tuck, Chloe Bakst, Steve Fitton, and Linda Genen are with the Institute for Medicaid Innovation, Child and Adolescent Health Subcommittee, Washington, DC. Anna Potere is with First 5 LA, Los Angeles, CA. Kelly Bower is with the Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing, Baltimore, MD.

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Race, Medicaid Coverage, and Equity in Maternal Morbidity.

Womens Health Issues

June 2021

Institute for Medicaid Innovation, Washington, District of Columbia; University of Michigan Medical School, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Background: Severe maternal morbidity (SMM) affects 50,000 deliveries in the United States annually, with around 1.5 times the rates among Medicaid-covered relative to privately covered deliveries. Furthermore, large racial inequities exist in SMM for non-Hispanic Black women and Hispanic women with rates being 2.

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This study evaluated persistency in county-level rates of low birthweight outcomes to identify "hotspot counties" and their associated area-level characteristics. Administrative data from the National Center for Health Statistics Birth Data Files, years 2011 to 2016 were used to calculate annual county-level rates of low birthweight. Counties ranking in the worst quintile (Q5) for ≥3 years with a neighboring county in the worst quintile were identified as hotspot counties.

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Associations Between Comorbidities and Severe Maternal Morbidity.

Obstet Gynecol

November 2020

Department of Health Policy and Management, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arkansas; the Institute for Medicaid Innovation and the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC; and the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Objective: To evaluate the associations between the number of chronic conditions and maternal race and ethnicity (race) with the risk of severe maternal morbidity.

Methods: Using the National Inpatient Sample, Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, years 2016-2017, we examined risk of severe maternal morbidity among 1,480,925 delivery hospitalizations among women of different races and with different numbers of comorbid conditions using multivariable logistic regression.

Results: The rate of severe maternal morbidity was 139.

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Background: Rates of low birthweight and prematurity vary 2-fold across states in the United States, with increased rates among states with higher concentrations of racial minorities. Medicaid expansion may serve as a mechanism to reduce geographic variation within states that expanded, by improving health and access to care for vulnerable populations.

Objective: The objective of this study was to identify the association of Medicaid expansion with changes in county-level geographic variation in rates of low birthweight and preterm births, overall and stratified by race/ethnicity.

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Importance: Low birth weight and preterm birth are associated with adverse consequences including increased risk of infant mortality and chronic health conditions. Black infants are more likely than white infants to be born prematurely, which has been associated with disparities in infant mortality and other chronic conditions.

Objective: To evaluate whether Medicaid expansion was associated with changes in rates of low birth weight and preterm birth outcomes, both overall and by race/ethnicity.

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Introduction: Established by the Affordable Care Act, the National Quality Strategy (NQS) is the national policy goals aimed at improving the quality of health care for all Americans. The NQS established six priorities to provide better, more affordable care for individuals and communities. This is the first analysis of data on the NQS and access measures that focus on sex differences, health conditions, trends, and disparities.

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Variation in Coverage for Progesterone to Prevent Preterm Birth: A Survey of Medicaid Managed Care Organizations.

Womens Health Issues

October 2018

Institute for Medicaid Innovation, Washington, DC; University of Michigan Medical School, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Introduction: Preterm birth is the leading cause of U.S. infant morbidity and mortality; Medicaid enrollees disproportionately experience preterm deliveries.

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Solving Disparities Through Payment And Delivery System Reform: A Program To Achieve Health Equity.

Health Aff (Millwood)

June 2017

Marshall H. Chin is the Richard Parrillo Family Professor of Healthcare Ethics, Department of Medicine, and director of the RWJF Finding Answers: Solving Disparities through Payment and Delivery System Reform Program Office, both at the University of Chicago. This project was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Lucy Xu was supported by the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine Summer Research Program. Robert Nocon was supported by a Health Services Research training grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (Grant No. AHRQ T32 HS000084). Marshall Chin was supported by the Chicago Center for Diabetes Translation Research (Grant No. NIDDK P30 DK092949) and a Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (Grant No. NIDDK K24 DK071933). Chin is cochair of the Disparities Standing Committee of the National Quality Forum (NQF). He is a former president of the Society of General Internal Medicine and member of the America's Essential Hospitals Equity Leadership Forum. He has provided technical assistance to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation and is a member of the National Advisory Board of the Institute for Medicaid Innovation. The views expressed in this commentary do not necessarily represent the views of the NQF, Society of General Internal Medicine, America's Essential Hospitals, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Institute for Medicaid Innovation, or National Institutes of Health.

Payment systems generally do not directly encourage or support the reduction of health disparities. In 2013 the Finding Answers: Solving Disparities through Payment and Delivery System Reform program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation sought to understand how alternative payment models might intentionally incorporate a disparities-reduction component to promote health equity. A qualitative analysis of forty proposals to the program revealed that applicants generally did not link payment reform tightly to disparities reduction.

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Women's Voices in Maternity Care: The Triad of Shared Decision Making, Informed Consent, and Evidence-Based Practices.

J Perinat Neonatal Nurs

July 2017

Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor; and Institute for Medicaid Innovation, Washington, District of Columbia.

The United States is the only industrialized nation that has experienced dramatic increases in the use of maternity interventions resulting in poor birth outcomes. It is speculated that the increased rates of maternal mortality and other outcomes are attributed to the current maternity model of care focused on the overuse of interventions, such as induction of labor, in otherwise healthy pregnant women. The overuse of induction of labor to artificially speed up the birth process has been linked to an increase in preterm and cesarean births.

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A Model of Organizational Context and Shared Decision Making: Application to LGBT Racial and Ethnic Minority Patients.

J Gen Intern Med

June 2016

Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, 5841 South Maryland Avenue, MC 2007, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA.

Shared decision making (SDM) occurs when patients and clinicians work together to reach care decisions that are both medically sound and responsive to patients' preferences and values. SDM is an important tenet of patient-centered care that can improve patient outcomes. Patients with multiple minority identities, such as sexual orientation and race/ethnicity, are at particular risk for poor SDM.

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