Concordance and Patient-Centered Care in Medicaid Enrollees’ Care Experience With Providers

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Abstract

Patient-centered care is at the nexus of several overlapping institutional reforms to improve health care system performance. However, we know little regarding Medicaid patients’ experience with their doctors along several key dimensions of patient-centered care, and how their experience compares with Medicare and privately insured patients. We studied 4 outcomes using the 2017 National Health Interview Survey: patient–provider concordance on racial/sexual/cultural identity, respectful provider attitude, solicitation of patient opinion/beliefs during the care encounter, and patient-centered communication (PCC). The primary independent variable was Medicaid enrollee status. We dichotomized responses and ran multivariate logistic regressions for each type of care experience outcome, controlling for sociodemographic factors, health care access, and health care utilization of respondents. Compared to Medicare and privately insured enrollees, Medicaid enrollees reported much lower odds of seeing providers who treated them with respect (OR = 1.91, P

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Ghabowen, I. K., & Bhandari, N. (2021). Concordance and Patient-Centered Care in Medicaid Enrollees’ Care Experience With Providers. Journal of Patient Experience, 8. https://doi.org/10.1177/23743735211034028

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