Association of State Medicaid Expansion with Rate of Uninsured Hospitalizations for Major Cardiovascular Events, 2009-2014

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Abstract

Importance: Cardiovascular disease is the leading primary diagnosis among all hospital discharges, and insurance status is associated with patient outcomes. The association of state-level policy decisions regarding the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid expansion with rates of uninsured hospitalizations for major cardiovascular events and in-hospital mortality has not been investigated to date. Objective: To investigate whether the rates of uninsured hospitalizations for major cardiovascular events and in-hospital mortality varied by state-level policy on ACA Medicaid expansion. Design, Setting, and Participants: For this cohort study, difference-in-differences analysis of data from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases of 30 US states on 524848 non-Medicare hospitalizations in 2014 and a mean of 516811 non-Medicare hospitalizations per year from 2009 to 2013 was performed for major cardiovascular events (defined as a composite of acute myocardial infarction, stroke, and heart failure) from January 1, 2009, through December 31, 2014. Analyses were completed September 1, 2017. Exposure: State Medicaid expansion as of January 1, 2014. Main Outcomes and Measures: Comparison of mean payer mix proportions (uninsured, Medicaid, and privately insured) and in-hospital mortality between expansion and nonexpansion states for the years preceding the ACA Medicaid expansion (2009-2013) and the year after the ACA Medicaid expansion (2014). Results: Of the 801819 hospitalizations in the 17 expansion states in 2014, 428503 (53.4%) patients were men, 514036 (64.1%) were white, and 365797 (45.6%) were aged 65 to 84 years. Of 719459 hospitalizations in the 13 nonexpansion states in 2014, 383311 (53.3%) patients were men, 492136 (68.4%) were white, and 335781 (46.7%) were aged 65 to 84 years. There were 281184 non-Medicare hospitalizations for major cardiovascular events in the 17 expansion states and 243664 non-Medicare hospitalizations in the 13 nonexpansion states in 2014. In multivariable regression analyses, the expansion states had a significant 5.8-percentage point decrease in the proportion of uninsured hospitalizations after Medicaid expansion relative to the nonexpansion states (adjusted difference-in-differences estimate, -0.058; 95% CI, -0.075 to -0.042; P

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Akhabue, E., Pool, L. R., Yancy, C. W., Greenland, P., & Lloyd-Jones, D. (2018). Association of State Medicaid Expansion with Rate of Uninsured Hospitalizations for Major Cardiovascular Events, 2009-2014. JAMA Network Open, 1(4). https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2018.1296

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