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Impact of a Voucher Program on Consumer Choices of Personal Assistance Providers: Urban-Rural Differences. Hongdao Meng, Ph.D., Stony Brook University Brenda Wamsley, Ph.D., West Virginia State University. Acknowledgments.
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Impact of a Voucher Program on Consumer Choices of Personal Assistance Providers: Urban-Rural Differences Hongdao Meng, Ph.D., Stony Brook University Brenda Wamsley, Ph.D., West Virginia State University
Acknowledgments • Funding agency: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (# 95-C-90467/2-01) • Monroe County Long Term Care Program, Inc., Rochester, NY. • Center for Aging and Healthcare in WV, Inc., Parkersburg, WV.
Background • Personal Assistance Services (PAS) help people with long-term care needs to live independently in their homes. • PAS is delivered via: • “Agency-directed” model (ADM) • “Consumer-directed” model (CDM)
Background • Benefits of CDM: • Flexibility • Autonomy • Potential cost-savings • Expanded care worker pool • Concerns of CDM: • Cognitive impairment • Hiring of family members • Quality assurance
Objectives • To examine the impact of a voucher program on consumer choices of PAS providers (ADM or CDM). • To assess urban-rural differences in these choices.
Study Design • Randomized controlled trial: • Control group: regular Medicare • Nurse group: health promotion nurse home visit • Voucher group: $200 monthly PAS benefits • Combination group: Nurse + Voucher
Sample • 1605 participants who meet the inclusion criteria of this study: • Community-dwelling (NY, WV, OH) • Medicare Parts A and B enrollee, and • 2+ ADLs or 3+ IADLs, and • Had prior health services use (ER, hospital, NH, or home care)
Data • Baseline assessment data • Socio-demographics • Health and functional status • Prior health services use • PAS utilization data over two years • Personal care aide • Home health aide • Respite care
Analytical Strategies • Descriptive statistics • Multivariate logistic regression adjusting for the following co-variates: • Age, gender, education, income, MediGap, Medicaid, caregiver status • ADLs, IADLs, Cognitive Performance Scale • Prior health services use
Mean age 77 27% age 85+ 69% female 96% White 33% income < $10k 73% had caregiver 38% lived alone 11% had Medicaid 3% had LTC insurance Mean # of ADLs 2.3 Mean # of IADLs 3.5 Mean # of chronic conditions: 4.4 Prior service use: Hospital 63% ER 23% Nursing home 10% Home care 52% Baseline Descriptive Results
Odds Ratio for PAS Use, by Provider Type Adjusted for covariates
Odds Ratio for PAS Use, by Provider Type and Urban-Rural **: p < 0.01, adjusted for covariates
Summary of Key Findings • Overall, the voucher program increased the probabilities of using both types of PAS providers. • In urban areas, the voucher effect is primarily on the use of agency-employed workers. • In rural areas, the voucher effect is primarily on the use of privately-hired workers.
Limitations • Generalizability • Definition of rural
Policy Implication • A voucher program for PAS promotes its use moderately. • Consumer behavior under the voucher program differs substantially between urban and rural participants. • The availability of agency and private workers may explain part of the observed differences. • These differences should be taken into account in promoting the use of consumer-directed models.