Medicaid expansion states saw ER visits go up, uninsured ER visits go down
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"Medicaid expansion had a larger impact on the health care system in places where more people were expected to gain coverage," said lead study author
The study, which analyzed patient visits in 25 states (14 states that expanded Medicaid coverage and 11 that did not), found that the share of visits covered by private insurance remained constant for expansion states and increased by several percentage points for non-expansion states. Gains in insurance coverage in non-expansion states were almost entirely in the form of private coverage, not Medicaid.
Among the visit types that could be measured, increases in emergency department visits were largest for injury-related visits. There was also a large change in payer mix for dental visits, likely because dental emergency department visits are most prevalent among low-income, non-elderly adults, who would be covered by Medicaid. Out-of-pocket dental costs were reported as one of the more unaffordable types of care among the target population for Medicaid expansion under the ACA.
Keywords for this news article include: Dentistry, Health Policy, Affordable Care Act, Medicare and Medicaid,
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