Columbia School of Public Health: Medicaid Study – Expanding Insurance Coverage for Adults Also Helps Enroll Children
Expanding Medicaid coverage for adults also helps to cover children, according to a new study by researchers at
The findings of the paper, "Out of the Woodwork: Enrollment Spillovers in the Oregon Health Insurance Experiment," are published in the
In the lottery, some low income uninsured adult enrollees were randomly selected to be allowed to apply for Medicaid. Winning or losing the lottery did not change whether their children were eligible for coverage. The researchers asked whether expanding eligibility for one group, adults, helped to bring another group, their children, into coverage. Prior studies have referred to this phenomenon as the "woodwork effect" or the "welcome mat effect".
"Our study shows that expanding Medicaid eligibility can improve insurance coverage rates for people who weren't even the target of the expansion," said
Medicaid provides health insurance coverage to 81 million people in the
"This research highlights the value of conducting further secondary studies of randomized trials," said Sacarny. "When you link trials with additional administrative data, you can use them to study additional, potentially really important questions for economic and social policy."
The study also provides a new perspective on the broader impacts of Medicaid coverage expansions. "We found evidence of these woodwork effects," said co-author
While the researchers found meaningful woodwork effects, they also found that the effects were short-lived. They showed that children of lottery winners saw an immediate jump in coverage as their parents signed up, but children of lottery losers eventually gained coverage, too.
"Therefore, our results suggest that woodwork effects mainly to encourage earlier enrollment for children who would have otherwise gained coverage later," observed Sacarny.
The results point to two reasons there is incomplete coverage among people who are eligible for Medicaid, according to Sacarny. First, Medicaid's eligibility rules can be complicated and some families may not be aware of them. In this experiment, when adults "won" the opportunity for to enroll in Medicaid, they may have learned about their children's eligibility. Second, applying for Medicaid can be burdensome: at the time in
"Incomplete enrollment in social insurance programs is pervasive including in the Medicaid program," said Sacarny. "The present study demonstrates the many ways that randomized trials, like
The study was supported by the
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Original text here: https://www.publichealth.columbia.edu/public-health-now/news/new-medicaid-study-expanding-insurance-coverage-adults-also-helps-enroll-children
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