Background Lower rates of use of resources have been reportedfor the treatment of hospitalized patients covered by Medicaidthan for privately insured patients. Cost-containment policiesmay exacerbate such differences in the use of hospital resources.We studied patients with ischemic heart disease who receivedcare at nonfederal hospitals in California in 1983 (the yeara Medicaid cost-containment program was implemented), in 1985,or in 1988. Within this sample of patients, we compared therates of coronary revascularization (coronary-artery bypasssurgery or coronary angioplasty) among patients covered by Medicaid,patients with private insurance covering fee-for-service care,and patients enrolled in a health maintenance organization (HMO).
Methods Logistic-regression models were used to determine adjustedodds ratios for the use of coronary revascularization proceduresin patients with different types of insurance, with controlfor demographic, clinical, and hospital characteristics. Thestudy samples were made up of 49,167 patients in 1983, 47,809in 1985, and 44,631 in 1988.
Results The frequency of revascularization increased in allthree insurance groups from 1983 to 1988, but it did so muchfaster in the fee-for-service and HMO groups than in the Medicaidgroup. Patients with private fee-for-service insurance were1.66 times as likely as Medicaid patients to undergo revascularizationin 1983 (P<0.01), 2.01 times as likely in 1985 (P<0.01),and 2.33 times as likely in 1988 (P<0.01). Patients enrolledin HMOs were 0.96 times as likely as Medicaid patients to undergorevascularization in 1983 (P<0.05), 1.23 times as likelyin 1985 (P<0.01), and 1.53 times as likely in 1988 (P<0.01).
Conclusions The frequency of coronary revascularization in Californiain 1983 was nearly twice as high for patients with private fee-for-serviceinsurance as for patients enrolled in HMOs or for Medicaid recipients.The implementation that year of stringent cost-control measuresby Medicaid may explain the slower increase in the frequencyof revascularization over five years among Medicaid recipientsas compared with patients in the fee-for-service and HMO groups.Different incentives in fee-for-service and HMO practice mayexplain the lower frequency of revascularization among patientsenrolled in HMOs, although the rates of increase for these twogroups were about the same from 1983 to 1988.
Source Information
From the Harris Graduate School of Public Policy Studies (K.M.L.) and the Pritzker School of Medicine (K.M.L., E.J.S.), University of Chicago, Chicago. Presented in preliminary form at the national meeting of the Society of General Internal Medicine, Washington, D.C., April 30, 1992.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Sussman at Lehigh Valley Hospital, Cedar Crest and I-78, P.O. Box 689, Allentown, PA 18105-1556.
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