Payer shifting after expansions in access to private care among veterans

Author:

Rose Liam12ORCID,Tran Diem12ORCID,Wu Siqi3,Dalton Aaron4,Kirsh Susan5,Vashi Anita46ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterans Affairs Health Economics Resource Center Menlo Park California USA

2. Stanford Surgery Policy Improvement Research and Education (S‐SPIRE) Center Stanford University Stanford California USA

3. Stanford Primary Care and Population Health Stanford University Stanford California USA

4. Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Innovation to Implementation Menlo Park California USA

5. Department of Veterans Affairs Acting Deputy Assistant Undersecretary for Health for Discovery Education and Affiliated Networks Washington DC USA

6. Department of Emergency Medicine University of California, San Francisco San Francisco California USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo investigate whether expanded access to Veterans Affairs (VA)‐purchased care increased overall utilization or induced a shift from other payers to VA for emergency care among VA enrollees.Data Sources and Study SettingThis study included all emergency department (ED) encounters in 2019 from hospitals in the state of New York.Study DesignWe conducted a difference‐in‐differences analysis comparing VA enrollees to the general population before and after the implementation of the Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (MISSION) Act in June 2019.Data Collection/Extraction MethodsWe included all ED visits with individuals aged 30 or older at the time of the encounter. Individuals were considered eligible for the policy change if they were enrolled with VA at the beginning of 2019.Principal FindingsOf the 5,577,199 ED visits in the sample, 4.9% (n = 253,799) were made by VA enrollees. Of these, 44.9% of visits were paid by Medicare, 32.8% occurred in VA facilities, and 7% were paid by private health insurance. There was a 6.4% (2.91 percentage points; std. error = 0.18; p < 0.01) decrease in the proportion of ED visits paid by Medicare among VA enrollees relative to the general population after the implementation of the MISSION Act in June 2019. This decrease was larger for ED visits with a subsequent inpatient admission (−8.4%; 4.87 percentage points; std. error = 0.33; p < 0.01). There was no statistically significant change in the total volume of ED visits (0.06%; std. error = 0.08; p = 0.45).ConclusionsLeveraging a novel dataset, we demonstrate that MISSION Act implementation coincided with a shift in the financing of non‐VA ED visits from Medicare to VA without any increase in overall ED utilization. These findings have important implications for VA health care financing and delivery.

Funder

Health Services Research and Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health Policy

Reference25 articles.

1. Department of Veterans Affairs.Community care network (CCN).2022. Accessed July 2 2022.https://www.va.gov/COMMUNITYCARE/docs/pubfiles/factsheets/FactSheet_26-01.pdf#

2. Assessment of Changes in US Veterans Health Administration Care Delivery Methods During the COVID-19 Pandemic

3. Congressional Budget Office.The Veterans Community Care Program: background and early effects. Accessed February 2 2022.https://www.cbo.gov/publication/57583

4. Department of Veterans Affairs.FY 2023 budget submission—budget in brief.2022.https://www.va.gov/budget/docs/summary/fy2023-va-budget-in-brief.pdf

5. Waiting for Care in Veterans Affairs Health Care Facilities and Elsewhere

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