Change Over Time in Hospital Care for Medicaid Beneficiaries: Analysis of Hospitalizations from 2016-2019.

Journal: Medical Care
Published:
Abstract

Background: Historically, access to high-quality care has been a central challenge for Medicaid programs. Prior single-year analyses demonstrated that Medicaid beneficiaries account for disproportionately high patient volumes at low-quality hospitals. Given major Medicaid shifts including expansion and increased managed care, we examined recent trends in low-quality hospital use for Medicaid beneficiaries.

Methods: Using Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases, we compiled adult hospital discharges from 15 states in years 2016-2019 (N=32,788,446). Hospital quality was assessed with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Composite Inpatient Quality Indicator, reflecting risk-adjusted mortality for prevalent conditions. We constructed a logistic regression modeling odds of discharge from a low-quality hospital (bottom 20th percentile by year), with payer-year interactions and covariates for patient demographics (sex, age, race/ethnicity, income), comorbidities, state, and hospitalization type.

Results: Overall, patients with Medicaid [adjusted odds ratio (aOR)=1.11, P<0.01] or Medicare (aOR=1.03, P<0.01) were more likely to be hospitalized in low-quality hospitals, compared with private insurance (reference). The likelihood of admission to low-quality hospitals over time varied by payer. Patients insured by Medicaid were 2% less likely to be admitted to low-quality hospitals each additional year (aOR=0.98, P<0.01). Medicare-insured patients did not show significant changes longitudinally, and privately insured patients were 3% more likely to be admitted to low-quality hospitals each year (aOR=1.03, P<0.01).

Conclusions: This is one of the first studies examining associations between payer and inpatient care quality over time, critical for our rapidly changing payment environment. Although Medicaid-insured patients remain more likely to be discharged from low-quality hospitals as compared with other payers, we find promising recent trends of improving hospital quality over time for Medicaid beneficiaries.

Authors
Jacqueline Xu, Jeffrey Hodis, Kary Calderon, Paul Chung, Robert Nocon