Posts Tagged ‘National Bureau of Economic Research’

Guess what? Medicaid Matters

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

A new study today, the most robust of its kind in 40 years, concludes that Medicaid makes a big difference for its enrollees. The study, authored by the National Bureau of Economic Research, documented that Medicaid recipients, on average, were more likely to have a usual doctor, obtain preventative services, and overall, were healthier and felt better.

For advocates, this is no surprise.

The study, based on patients in Oregon, is unique. Because of limited funds in Oregon, the state allocated Medicaid slots through a lottery, enrolling 10,000 of its 90,000 applicants. This allowed researchers to ethically measure the effect of people who enrolled in Medicaid against those who did not. This randomized trial is the gold standard for research studies.

There were also other benefits to having Medicaid. The study found that people with Medicaid were less likely, on average, to have medical debt. Medicaid offers Americans both financial and health security.

The study results are a firm rebuttal to Medicaid critics who claim that vulnerable patients would fare better by relying on charity care and emergency rooms than insurance. As the lead author MIT economist Amy Finkelstein notes: “The bottom line is that Medicaid really matters in people’s lives…There is a large concern out there about whether Medicaid actually makes a difference, and now we actually have evidence.”

— Eva Marie Stahl, Policy Analyst

The Insider: All this could be yours someday

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Fuzzy logic
As the “tax extenders” bill makes its way through the Senate, a provision to extend COBRA premium subsidies for the unemployed is in jeopardy. Opponents in the Senate and the Blue Dogs in the House who stripped the provision from legislation two weeks ago argue that it’s unfair to help people who are unemployed when other, equally needy people are getting no assistance.

Just stop and think about that for a minute: It’s not like they’re identifying an alternative beneficiary for assistance, or arguing to accelerate implementation of the Affordable Care Act. They are basically saying, “Because we can’t help everybody, we won’t help anybody.” If you apply that reasoning more broadly it leads you to advocate the repeal, or at least the suspension, of Medicare and Medicaid until 2014, when financial assistance to obtain coverage becomes more generally available–a move few Congressmembers would dare consider, even in a non-election year.

With unemployment remaining high, the COBRA premium subsidies in limbo are badly needed. They are good for the economy, the health care system, and mostly for the thousands of struggling families who will be able to retain their coverage. Find out more at Community Catalyst’s implementation headquarters.

Faulkner on health care
When William Faulkner wrote, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past,” he could have been talking about the politics of health care more than a half-century into the future. Congressional Republicans’ challenge of the White House public education campaign on Medicare changes as misuse of government funds for partisan advantage hearkens back to Democrats’ attacks on the Bush administration over the original Medicare Part D roll-out.

And Senators who opposed PPACA seem intent on re-debating the legislation at every opportunity: first, in the context of Don Berwick’s nomination to head CMS, and now in the debate over the Medicare physician payment fix. Republicans have offered an alternative that does more for the physicians but partially pays for it by eliminating desperately-needed financial assistance for state Medicaid programs—while slipping in a “poison pill” that would roll back the individual responsibility provisions in PPACA. Such a move could appeal to many on the left who are concerned that the affordability provisions don’t go far enough.

Someday, all this could be yours
As the “repeal and replace” drumbeat goes on, a third ‘r’ should be added to the sequence: Recycle. Congressional Republicans are recycling ideas from the debate that were shown to fail to reduce the number of uninsured or eliminate insurance discrimination.

But as several states move forward with anti-Affordable Care Act ballot measures, new research from Massachusetts shows just how wrongheaded such opposition is. Until the coverage provisions of the Affordable Care Act kick in in 2014, Massachusetts provides the closest thing we have to a “beta site” for what the health care system of tomorrow will look like. While critics focus on the continuing cost challenges (problems that pre-dated health reform in Massachusetts  and were not really addressed in the landmark law in 2006) new reports published by the Urban Institute and the National Bureau of Economic Research underscore just what other states can gain as they move forward with implementing the law.

Urban’s latest report shows that the coverage gap between racial and ethnic minorities and non-Hispanic whites has been closed—the only place in the country where this is true. Additional findings show:

  • –high rates of coverage in Massachusetts persist despite continued high unemployment
  • –economic barriers to obtaining care remain low and have declined further for some populations since the inception of the law
  • –four years into implementation, there is still no evidence of ‘crowd-out’ of private coverage, and public support for the Massachusetts system remains high.

Get the details here (pdf).

The NBER paper found that since reform in Massachusetts, there have been fewer preventable hospitalizations and emergency room-generated admissions, and length of hospital stays has been reduced, most likely due to improvements in access to ambulatory care.

Sure makes implementation look like a lot better idea than repeal.

–Michael Miller, director of strategic policy