Medicare Advantage's Provision of Expanded Supplemental Benefits and Acute Care Utilization
研究2019-2020年Medicare Advantage计划提供的非医疗健康相关补充福利(如居家支持、食品安全)是否减少了参保者的急诊、住院和再入院,发现对高度虚弱人群有显著降低效果。
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether Medicare Advantage (MA) plans' provision of expanded supplemental benefits reduces enrollees' acute care utilization. Expanded supplemental benefits included non-medical primarily health-related (PHR) benefits such as in-home support services, starting in 2019, and Special Supplemental Benefits for the Chronically Ill (SSBCI) such as food security and housing quality benefits, starting in 2020. STUDY SETTING AND DESIGN: Quasi-experimental design using staggered difference-in-differences models. We created indicators for offering the following benefits: Any expanded PHR, ≥ 2 expanded PHR, any SSBCI, and ≥ 2 SSBCI. Acute care utilization was measured by three binary indicators of adverse health events: annual emergency department (ED) use, hospitalizations, and re-admissions. DATA SOURCES AND ANALYTIC SAMPLE: We used 2017-2022 MA encounter data from a random 20% sample of enrollees. We estimated separate models for each benefit indicator, for all non-dual and all dual-eligible enrollees, and for highly frail patients within each non-dual and dual-eligible group. We used propensity score matching to balance baseline characteristics between treatment and control groups. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Offering expanded supplemental benefits did not generally reduce acute care utilization in all non-dual or all dual-eligible enrollees. A few significant effects were relatively small or were not robust to potential differential trends between benefit-offering and not-offering plans. However, among highly frail non-dual enrollees, offering any PHR reduced re-admissions by -2.82 percentage points (95% CI: -4.78, -0.86), offering ≥ 2 expanded PHR reduced hospitalizations by -1.79 percentage points (95% CI: -2.61, -0.98) and ED use by -1.76 percentage points (95% CI: -2.38, -1.14), and offering ≥ 2 SSBCI reduced ED use by -3.51 percentage points (95% CI: -4.96, -2.05) and hospitalizations by -2.05 percentage points (95% CI: -3.12, -0.099). CONCLUSIONS: Provision of expanded supplemental benefits may reduce acute care utilization for certain enrollees. As spending on MA supplemental benefits rises, continued efforts are needed to assess impacts of those benefits.