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Motivation. Ongoing policy interest in expanding Medicare benefits while reducing spendingMedicare Advantage plans provide a voluntary, managed care alternative to Fee-for-ServicePayments to plans now exceed average FFS spendingLittle is known about quality or cost implications of increasing enrollment in Medicare Advantage plans.
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1. Hospital Utilization by Fee-for-Service and Medicare Advantage EnrolleesLauren Hersch NicholasUniversity of MichiganSeptember 15, 2009
2. Motivation Ongoing policy interest in expanding Medicare benefits while reducing spending
Medicare Advantage plans provide a voluntary, managed care alternative to Fee-for-Service
Payments to plans now exceed average FFS spending
Little is known about quality or cost implications of increasing enrollment in Medicare Advantage plans
3. Research Questions Does managed care affect hospital utilization for Medicare beneficiaries?
Quality of outpatient care: Ambulatory Care Sensitive Admissions
Access to elective procedures: Referral-Sensitive Admissions
Does managed care enrollment affect total Medicare spending?
4. Background Existing quality and utilization literature indicates quality problems in early Medicare managed care plans
Yet managed care consistently better at preventive service use
Cost spillovers from managed care believed to hold down FFS spending, but higher payments to plans raise total spending
Managed care plans historically attract healthier enrollees
Findings mostly from 1990s, don’t identify casual effects
5. State Inpatient Database Discharge abstracts from hospitalizations in AZ, FL, NJ, and NY
20% of Medicare beneficiaries and 25% of Medicare Advantage enrollees live in one of these 4 states
All in-state hospitalizations from 1990-2005
Include Medicare Advantage and Fee-for-Service beneficiaries
ICD-9 diagnostics and procedure codes used to identify ambulatory care sensitive (AHRQ Prevention Quality Indicators) and referral-sensitive admissions
Marker hospitalizations, which are not affected by medical care, provide comparison group
Medicare enrollment date ? demographic information for all beneficiaries
6. Ambulatory Care Sensitive Admissions Potentially avoided with effective primary care
7. Referral-Sensitive Admissions Technology-intensive procedures, require referral
Low rates of procedures may suggest barriers to service use
8. Marker Admissions Hospitalizations which are unrelated to recent medical care, reflect underlying health status, private information influencing insurance choice and utilization
9. Unadjusted Rates of Hospitalization for Medicare Advantage and Fee-for-Service Enrollees
10. Medicare Advantage and Fee-for-Service Enrollees are Demographically Similar
11. What explains differences in hospital utilization? Medicare Advantage plans attract healthier enrollees, otherwise provide the same care as Fee-for-Service
Medicare Advantage plans manage care to limit utilization, ? reduce elective procedure use
Medicare Advantage plans manage care to preserve beneficiary health, ? reduce potentially preventable admissions
12. Empirical Approach Insurance Type-Country-Year level regressions of rate of hospitalization on Medicare coverage type and demographics
County and Year fixed effects
Two-stage estimation procedure using ratio of observed to expected marker hospitalizations to control for unobserved health status differences
Pairs-Cluster Bootstrap used to calculate standard errors
13. Effect of Managed Care on Rates of Hospitalization (1)
14. Effect of Managed Care on Rates of Hospitalization (2) Managed care significantly reduces potentially preventable hospitalizations
Acute reductions primarily from Pneumonia and Urinary Tract Infection ? earlier access to antibiotics?
No overall managed care effect for referral-sensitive hospitalizations, but significant reduction in elective joint replacement (3.5 per 1,000 enrollees) and pacemaker insertion (0.9 per 1,000)
Positive selection into Medicare Advantage plans accounts for between 25 and 35 percent of risk-adjusted differences
15. Trends in Ambulatory Care Sensitive Admissions in Medicare Advantage and Fee-for-Service
16. Medicare Advantage and Medicare Spending Nationally, 1% increase in Medicare Advantage enrollment increases average Medicare spending between 0.3 and 1.1%
Is extra spending on managed care cost-effective way to reduce ACS admissions?
Increasing plan payment rates by $600 per enrollee per year would reduce ACS admissions rate by 1 per 1,000
17. Conclusions and Policy Implications Medicare Advantage plans have lower rates of ambulatory care sensitive admissions
No overall difference in referral-sensitive admissions
Both positive selection and true “managed care effect” explain observed differences in utilization
Higher payments to plans concentrate enrollment on healthier enrollees, hospitalizations primarily reduced by low-cost interventions
Potential to reduce total spending by improving access to acute care in FFS?