Affiliation:
1. Abigail S. Friedman and Sakinah C. Suttiratana are with the Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT. Sasha Thomas is with Yale College, New Haven.
Abstract
Objectives. To estimate whether state Medicaid expansions’ relationships to breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screening differ by race/ethnicity.Methods. Analyses conducted in 2021 used 2011–2016 and 2018–2019 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System data on adults aged 40 to 64 years with household incomes below 400% of the federal poverty guideline (FPG; n = 537 250). Triple-difference analyses compared cancer screening in Medicaid expansion versus nonexpansion states, before versus after expansion, among people with incomes above versus below the eligibility cutoff (138% FPG). Race/ethnicity and ethnicity-by-language interaction terms tested for effect modification.Results. Associations between Medicaid expansions and cancer screening were significant for past-2-year mammograms and past-5-year colorectal screening. Effect modification analyses showed elevated mammography among non-Hispanic Asian women (+9.0 percentage points; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.2, 14.8) and Hispanic women (+6.0 percentage points; 95% CI = 2.0, 10.1), and Papanicolaou tests among Hispanic women (+4.2 percentage points; 95% CI = 0.1, 8.2). Findings were not limited to English- or Spanish-speaking respondents and were robust to insurance status controls.Conclusions. Medicaid expansions yielded statistically significant increases in income-eligible Asian and Hispanic women’s mammography and Hispanic women’s Pap testing relative to non-Hispanic White women. Neither language proficiency nor insurance status explained these findings. (Am J Public Health. 2022;112(11):1630–1639. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.307027 )
Publisher
American Public Health Association
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Cited by
3 articles.
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