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Higher Medicare SNF Care Utilization by Dual‐Eligible Beneficiaries: Can Medicaid Long‐Term Care Policies Be the Answer?
Author(s) -
Rahman Momotazur,
Tyler Denise,
Thomas Kali S.,
Grabowski David C.,
Mor Vincent
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
health services research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.706
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1475-6773
pISSN - 0017-9124
DOI - 10.1111/1475-6773.12204
Subject(s) - medicaid , medicine , minimum data set , payment , patient protection and affordable care act , long term care , demography , gerontology , family medicine , nursing homes , nursing , health care , finance , business , sociology , economics , economic growth
Objective To examine outcomes associated with dual eligibility (Medicare and Medicaid) of patients who are admitted to skilled nursing facility ( SNF ) care and whether differences in outcomes are related to states' Medicaid long‐term care policies. Data Sources/Collection We used national Medicare enrollment data and claims, and the Minimum Data Set for 890,922 community‐residing Medicare fee‐for‐service beneficiaries who were discharged to an SNF from a general hospital between July 2008 and June 2009. Study Design We estimated the effect of dual eligibility on the likelihood of 30‐day rehospitalization, becoming a long‐stay nursing home resident, and 180‐day survival while controlling for clinical, demographic, socio‐economic, residential neighborhood characteristics, and SNF ‐fixed effects. We estimated the differences in outcomes by dual eligibility status separately for each state and showed their relationship with state policies: the average Medicaid payment rate; presence of nursing home certificate‐of‐need ( CON ) laws; and Medicaid home and community‐based services ( HCBS ) spending. Principal Findings Dual‐eligible patients are equally likely to experience 30‐day rehospitalization, 12 percentage points more likely to become long‐stay residents, and 2 percentage points more likely to survive 180 days compared to Medicare‐only patients. This longer survival can be attributed to longer nursing home length of stay. While higher HCBS spending reduces the length‐of‐stay gap without affecting the survival gap, presence of CON laws reduces both the length‐of‐stay and survival gaps. Conclusions Dual eligibles utilize more SNF care and experience higher survival rates than comparable Medicare‐only patients. Higher HCBS spending may reduce the longer SNF length of stay of dual eligibles without increasing mortality and may save money for both Medicare and Medicaid.