Joint effects of Medicaid eligibility and fees on recession‐linked declines in healthcare access and health status

Author:

Benitez Joseph1ORCID,Callison Kevin2ORCID,Adams E. Kathleen3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Management & Policy College of Public Health Martin School of Public Policy and Administration University of Kentucky Lexington Kentucky USA

2. Department of Health Policy & Management School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine Murphy Institute for Political Economy Tulane University New Orleans Louisiana USA

3. Department of Health Policy & Management Rollins School of Public Health Emory University Atlanta Georgia USA

Abstract

AbstractWhether Medicaid can function as a safety net to offset health risks created by health insurance coverage losses due to job loss is conditional on (1) the eligibility guidelines shaping the pathway for households to access the program for temporary relief, and (2) Medicaid reimbursement policies affecting the value of the program for both the newly and previously enrolled. We find states with more expansive eligibility guidelines lowered the healthcare access and health risk of coverage loss associated with rising unemployment during the 2007–2009 Great Recession. Rises in cost‐related barriers to care associated with unemployment were smallest in states with expansive eligibility guidelines and higher Medicaid‐to‐Medicare fee ratios. Similarly, states whose Medicaid programs had expansive eligibility guidelines and higher fees saw the smallest recession‐linked declines in self‐reported good health. Medicaid can work to stabilize access to health care during periods of joblessness. Our findings yield important insights into the alignment of at least two Medicaid policies (i.e., eligibility and payment) shaping Medicaid's viability as a safety net.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference65 articles.

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2. Factors affecting physician provision of preventive care to Medicaid children;Adams E. K.;Health Care Financing Review,2001

3. COVID‐19 and Medicaid: Can state budgets handle it?;Adams E. K.;Econofact,2020

4. Alexander D. &Schnell M.(2019).The impacts of physician payments on patient access use and health. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series Working Paper Series July.https://doi.org/10.3386/w26095

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