Access to Urologic Care at Urgent Care Centers

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Abstract

Objective: To evaluate Medicaid insurance access disparities for urologic care at urgent care centers (UCCs) in the United States. Materials and Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study using a “secret shopper” methodology. We sampled 240 UCCs across 8 states. Using a standardized script, researchers posed as a patient with either Medicaid or commercial insurance in the clinical setting of obstructing nephrolithiasis. The primary study endpoint was whether a patient's insurance (Medicaid vs commercial) was accepted. We assessed factors associated with Medicaid acceptance using logistic regression models adjusted for state-level and facility-level characteristics. Additionally, we calculated triage rates, emergency department referral rates, and the ability of a UCC to refer the patient to a specialist. Results: Of 240 UCCs contacted, 239 (99.6%) accepted commercial insurance and 159 (66.2%) accepted Medicaid. UCCs in Medicaid expansion states more frequently accepted patients with Medicaid insurance (74.2% vs 58.3%, respectively, P

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Hsiang, W. R., Yousman, L., Kim, D., Cavallo, J. A., Kenney, P. A., Motamedinia, P., … Leapman, M. S. (2021). Access to Urologic Care at Urgent Care Centers. Urology, 156, 124–128. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2021.06.009

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