Inequality of Access to Surgical Specialty Health Care: Why Children With Government-Funded Insurance Have Less Access Than Those With Private Insurance in Southern California

Author:

Wang Edward C.1,Choe Meeryo C.1,Meara John G.2,Koempel Jeffrey A.13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California

2. Department of Plastic and Maxillofacial Surgery, Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia

3. Department of Otolaryngology, Children's Hospital, Los Angeles, California

Abstract

Objective. More than 25 million children in the United States are dependent on federal and state medical insurance programs for their health care needs. In California, 3.25 million children depend on Medi-Cal for their health insurance. In Southern California alone, the figure is as high as 1.81 million. However, 9.30 million children nationally and 1.55 million in California have no health insurance. Various public policies that would increase enrollment in these programs are being discussed to address this problem. However, before their implementation, it is important to understand what impact such policies would have on the actual delivery of health care to this patient population. In California, 2 predominant health care delivery models exist for Medi-Cal: a fee-for-service (so-called regular or straight Medi-Cal) and a managed care plan. One third of the children in Medi-Cal in the state are enrolled in the fee-for-service plan with the remainder in the managed care plan, whereas in Southern California, this figure is slightly lower at 28% in the fee-for-service plan. The objective of this study was to determine the number of otolaryngologists in Southern California who would offer a new patient appointment for an evaluation for tonsillectomy for a child with commercial insurance versus government-funded (Medi-Cal) insurance through direct contact with the physician and to determine whether the surgeon would offer to perform the procedure or refer the patient to another institution and to identify the specific reason(s) for any disparity in access to health care. Methods. A written questionnaire was sent via regular mail to 303 otolaryngologists in the Southern California area in 2003. Results. A total of 100 fully completed questionnaires were received. Ninety-seven surgeons would offer an office appointment to a child with commercial insurance as compared with only 27 for a child with Medi-Cal. Of those 27 surgeons, 8 would then refer the child to another physician to perform the surgery, and only 19 would actually offer to perform surgery, if indicated. Reasons provided for not offering an office appointment or surgery for the child with Medi-Cal include excessive paperwork and/or administrative burdens (96%), low monetary reimbursement for the surgery (92%), and low monetary reimbursement for the office visit (87%). Conclusions. There is a tremendous inequality of access to surgical specialty health care for children with government-funded insurance when compared with those with commercial insurance in Southern California. Physicians indicate that this disparity is related to excessive administrative burdens and low monetary reimbursement. The implications of our findings on public health care policies are discussed.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference19 articles.

1. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.2002 Data Compendium: Medicaid Enrollment and Beneficiaries, Selected Fiscal Years; September 2002. Available at: www.cms.hhs.gov/researchers/pubs/datacompendium/2002/02pg34.pdf. Accessed May 23, 2004

2. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.Medicaid: A Brief Summary; January, 2004. Available at: www.cms.hhs.gov/publications/overview-medicare-medicaid/default4.asp. Accessed May 25, 2004

3. California Healthcare Foundation.Medi-Cal Facts and Figures: A Look at California's Medicaid Program; January 2004. Available at: www.chcf.org/topics/medi-cal/index.cfm?itemID=21659&subtopic=CL157&subsection=medical101. Accessed May 25, 2004

4. California Department of Health Services.Medi-Cal Beneficiaries by Age/Demographics; October 2003. Available at: www.dhs.ca.gov/mcss/RequestedData/AgeXDemo/ageXdemo.htm. Accessed May 23, 2004

5. Kaiser Family Foundation State Health Facts Online.California: Distribution of Children 18 and Under by Insurance Status, State Data 2001–2002, U.S. 2002; March 2003. Available at: www.statehealthfacts.org/cgi-bin/healthfacts.cgi?action=profile&category=Health+Coverage+%26+Uninsured&subcategory=Insurance+Status&topic=Distribution+of+Children+18+and+Under&link_category=&link_subcategory=&link_topic=&welcome=0&area=California. Accessed May 25, 2004

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