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How Do Consumer-Directed Health Plans Affect Vulnerable Populations?
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2011
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Health Care DisparityHealth Insurance DesignHealth DisparitiesHealth Care ClaimsFinancial ProtectionHealth Care FinanceSocial Determinants Of HealthRacial DisparitiesHealth Reimbursement ArrangementsHealth FinancingPublic HealthInsurance RegulationsManaged CareHealth Services ResearchConsumer HealthHealth Insurance ReformHealth PolicyHealth InsurancePublic Health PolicyHealth ReimbursementHealth EconomicsHealth Care ReimbursementHealth Care Cost
Abstract We use health care claims data from 59 large employers to estimate how consumer-directed health plans (CDHPs)—plans that combine a high deductible with personal accounts—affect health care costs and the use of preventive services by vulnerable populations. The vulnerable populations studied are those that will have increased access to health insurance under health care reform: families with high health care needs and low income families. A difference-in-difference framework is used with costs and use available for a full year before and after enrolling in a CDHP and for controls. Our key finding is that in almost all cases, CDHP benefit designs affect lower income populations and the chronically ill to the same extent as non-vulnerable populations. These effects include significant reductions in overall spending that increase with the level of the deductible and greater reductions for high deductible plans when paired with health savings accounts (HSAs) in comparison to health reimbursement arrangements (HRAs). However, enrollment in CDHPs also leads to reductions in care that is considered beneficial for all groups, and this may have greater health consequences for lower income and chronically ill people than for others.