Grantee Publication

Delayed and Forgone Care for Families with Chronic Conditions in High-Deductible Health Plans

Journal of General Internal Medicine
Online First
January 18, 2012
Galbraith, A.A. et al.

Background: High-deductible health plans (HDHPs) are an increasingly common strategy to contain health care costs. Individuals with chronic conditions are at particular risk for increased out-of-pocket costs in HDHPs and resulting cost-related underuse of essential health care.

Objective: To evaluate whether families with chronic conditions in HDHPs have higher rates of delayed or forgone care due to cost, compared with those in traditional health insurance plans.

Journal Article: Trends in Retail Clinic Use Among the Commercially Insured

American Journal of Managed Care
Vol. 17, No. 11
November 2011
Ashwood, J.S. et al.
e443-e448

Objectives: To describe trends in retail clinic use among commercially insured patients and to identify which patient characteristics predict retail clinic use.

Study Design: Retrospective cohort analysis of commercial insurance claims sampled from a population of 13.3 million patients in 22 markets in 2007 to 2009.

Geographic Variation in Physicians' Responses to a Reimbursement Change

The New England Journal of Medicine
Vol. 365, No. 2
December 1, 2011
Jacobson, M. et al.
pp. 2049-2052

 

Journal Article: Undocumented Immigrants, Left Out of Health Reform, Likely to Continue to Grow As Share of the Uninsured

Health Affairs
Vol. 30, No. 10
October 2011
Zuckerman, S. et al.
pp. 1997-2004

The increase in undocumented immigration between 1999 and 2007 contributed to an increase in the number of uninsured people in the United States. During this period, the number of undocumented immigrants increased from an estimated 8.5 million to 11.8 million, leading to an estimated additional 1.8 million uninsured. These uninsured and undocumented immigrants were estimated to represent 27 percent of the overall increase of 6.9 million uninsured people during this period. Undocumented immigrants accounted for one in seven of the uninsured in 2007, up from one in eight in 1999.

Rising Closures of Hospital Trauma Centers Disproportionately Burden Vulnerable Populations

Health Affairs
Vol. 30, No. 10
October 2011
Hsia, R. and Shen, Y.
pp. 1912-1920

Closures of hospital trauma centers have accelerated since 2001. These closures may disproportionately affect disadvantaged communities. We evaluate how driving time between ZIP code areas and the nearest trauma centers—a proxy for access, given the time-sensitive nature of trauma care—changed nationwide during 2001–07. By 2007, sixty-nine million Americans (24 percent of the population) had to travel farther to the nearest trauma center than they did in 2001, and almost sixteen million people had to travel an additional thirty minutes or more.

The Increased Concentration of Health Plan Markets Can Benefit Consumers Through Lower Hospital Prices

Health Affairs
Vol. 30, No. 9
September 2011
Melnick, G., Shen, Y., et al.
1728-1733

The long-term trend of consolidation among US health plans has raised providers’ concerns that the concentration of health plan markets can depress their prices. Although our study confirmed that, it also revealed a more complex picture. First, we found that 64 percent of hospitals operate in markets where health plans are not very concentrated, and only 7 percent are in markets that are dominated by a few health plans. Second, we found that in most markets, hospital market concentration exceeds health plan concentration.

Lower-Income Families Pay a Higher Share of Income Toward National Health Care Spending Than Higher-Income Families Do

Health Affairs
Vol. 30, No.9
September 2011
Ketsche, P., Adams, K.E., et al.
1637-1646

All health care spending from public and private sources, such as governments and businesses, is ultimately paid by individuals and families. We calculated the burden of US health care spending on families as a percentage of income and found that at the national level, lower-income families pay a larger share of their incomes toward health care than do higher-income families.

Primary Care and Health Outcomes Among Older Patients with Diabetes

Health Services Research
Vol. 47, Issue 1, Part 1
February 2012
Prentice, J.C. et al.
pp. 46-47

 

US Physician Practices Versus Canadians: Spending Nearly Four Times as Much Money Interacting with Payers

Health Affairs
Vol. 30, No. 8
August 2011
Morra, D. et al.
pp. 1443-1450

Physician practices, especially the small practices with just one or two physicians that are common in the United States, incur substantial costs in time and labor interacting with multiple insurance plans about claims, coverage, and billing for patient care and prescription drugs. We surveyed physicians and administrators in the province of Ontario, Canada, about time spent interacting with payers and compared the results with a national companion survey in the United States.

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