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Rates of Avoidable Hospitalization by Insurance Status in Massachusetts and Maryland

692

Citations

27

References

1992

Year

TLDR

The study aims to determine whether uninsured and Medicaid patients experience higher rates of avoidable hospitalizations compared to insured patients and to demonstrate that this approach can monitor access and quality of care for these groups. The authors used 1987 hospital discharge data from nonfederal acute‑care hospitals in Massachusetts and Maryland, combined with Current Population Survey estimates to calculate age‑ and sex‑standardized admission rates for patients under 65, excluding obstetric and psychiatric cases, and compared relative risks for 12 physician‑identified avoidable conditions among uninsured, Medicaid, and privately insured groups. Uninsured and Medicaid patients had significantly higher rates of avoidable hospitalizations than privately insured patients, with 10 of 12 conditions in Massachusetts and 5 of.

Abstract

To determine whether uninsured and Medicaid patients have higher rates of avoidable hospitalizations than do insured patients.We used 1987 computerized hospital discharge data to select a cross-sectional sample of hospitalized patients. Population estimates from the Current Population Survey were used to estimate rates of admission, standardized for age and sex.Nonfederal acute care hospitals in Massachusetts and Maryland.All patients under 65 years of age who were uninsured, privately insured, or insured by Medicaid. Hospitalizations for obstetric and psychiatric conditions were excluded.Relative risk of admission for 12 avoidable hospital conditions (AHCs) identified by a physician panel.Uninsured and Medicaid patients were more likely than insured patients to be hospitalized for AHCs. Rates for uninsured patients were significantly greater than for privately insured patients in Massachusetts for 10 of 12 individual AHCs, and in Maryland for five of 12 AHCs. After adjustment for baseline utilization, the results were statistically significant for 10 of 12 AHCs in Massachusetts and seven of 12 AHCs in Maryland. For Medicaid patients, rates were significantly greater than for privately insured patients for all AHCs in each state before adjustment, and for nine of 12 and seven of 12 AHCs in each state, respectively, after adjustment for baseline utilization.Our findings suggest that patients who are uninsured or who have Medicaid coverage have higher rates of hospitalization for conditions that can often be treated out of hospital or avoided altogether. Our approach is potentially useful for routine monitoring of access and quality of care for selected groups of patients.

References

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