1 / 16

Access to Care: An Insurance Card that Means Something

Access to Care: An Insurance Card that Means Something. Getting to the Finish Line July 14, 2009 Amy Rosenthal, New England Alliance for Children’s Health Tom Vitaglione, North Carolina Action for Children Joe Touschner, Center for Children and Families. Access to care.

lamar-bruce
Download Presentation

Access to Care: An Insurance Card that Means Something

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Access to Care: An Insurance Card that Means Something Getting to the Finish Line July 14, 2009 Amy Rosenthal, New England Alliance for Children’s Health Tom Vitaglione, North Carolina Action for Children Joe Touschner, Center for Children and Families

  2. Access to care System-wide challenge Evaluating Medicaid and CHIP: what is the appropriate comparison? Primary vs. specialty

  3. Medicaid/CHIP Coverage and Access to Care Source: Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured analysis of National Center for Health Statistics, CDC. 2007. Summary of Health Statistics for U.S. Children: NHIS, 2007. Note: Questions about dental care were analyzed for children age 2-17. Respondents who said usual source of care was the emergency room were included among those not having a usual source of care. An asterisk (*) means in the past 12 months.

  4. Recent studies: Mixed Results Ku 2009 After adjusting for health status and sociodemographic factors, there were no significant differences between Medicaid children and the privately insured in emergency, outpatient, or inpatient hospital use; there was higher prescription drug use among Medicaid children. Hoilette, Clark, Gebremariam, & Davis 2009 Among the insured, publicly insured children had twice the odds of reporting an unmet need compared with privately insured children.

  5. Recent studies: Mixed Results Skinner & Mayer 2007 Literature review focused on specialty care showed that children with public coverage have better access to specialty care than uninsured children, but poorer access compared to privately insured children. Selden & Hudson 2006 Differences between public and private coverage are reduced (and often reversed) when we control for other characteristics of children and their families.

  6. Oral health care Less than 30% of children in Medicaid obtain any dental care in a year 25% receive preventive dental care Corresponding rates for privately insured children are about double

  7. Oral health care Dentist participation in Medicaid is low Low provider payments are are only one reason: 41 states increased payments 1999-2006, but only 25 increased utilization But no state increased utilization without increasing payment rates

  8. Access to care in Medicaid and CHIP • Measured nationally, access to preventive and primary care in Medicaid and CHIP is on par with access among children who have private insurance. • Oral health and specialty care may have challenges • How much does state experience vary?

  9. Problem Chronic illness accounts for vast amounts of healthcare costs Majority of chronic patients do not receive appropriate care Primary care providers feel limited in their ability Local public health, mental health, and community providers are not coordinated with PCPs

  10. Problems as Goals • Need to improve outcomes • Need to control costs

  11. Primary Strategies • Provide a medical home • Develop community networks capable of managing care • Develop systems to improve the care of chronic illness

  12. Community Care NC • 14 networks with more than 3500 PCPs (1200 medical homes) • Includes local health, mental health, hospitals and safety net clinics • Each has P/T medical director, a clinical coordinator, a PharmD, and care managers • PCPs receive $2.50 pm/pm • Netwrorks receive $3.00 pm/pm

  13. Evidence-Based Guidelines • Adopted by consensus • All networks: Asthma Diabetes Pharm Mgt. ED Utilization Mgt. • Optional: Child Development ADD/ADHD Gastroenteritis Others (hi cost; hi utilization)

  14. Results/Care • Asthma 34% lower hospital admission rate 8% lower ED rate • Diabetes 15% increase in quality measures • Child Development Developmental Screening rate 15% (2000) 85% (2005)

  15. Results/Money • 2004 Cost $10.2 m Savings $225 m • 2006 Savings $231m

  16. For more information Tricia Brooks pab62@georgetown.edu 202-365-9148 Our website: http://ccf.georgetown.edu/ Say Ahhh! Our child health policy blog: http://www.theccfblog.org/

More Related