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Public insurance expansions and mental health care availability
Author(s) -
Blunt Elson Oshman,
Maclean Johanna Catherine,
Popovici Ioana,
Marcus Steven C.
Publication year - 2020
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 - 10.1111/1475-6773.13311
Subject(s) - medicaid , specialty , mental health , observational study , patient protection and affordable care act , payment , public health insurance , health care , mental health care , national health interview survey , confidence interval , mental illness , actuarial science , public health , family medicine , health insurance , medicine , environmental health , business , psychiatry , nursing , population , finance , economics , pathology , economic growth
Objective To provide new evidence on the effects of large‐scale public health insurance expansions, associated with the Affordable Care Act (ACA), on the availability of specialty mental health care treatment in the United States. We measure availability with the probability that a provider accepts Medicaid. Data Source/Study Setting The National Mental Health Services Survey (N‐MHSS) 2010‐2018. Study Design A quasi‐experimental differences‐in‐differences design using observational data. Data Collection The N‐MHSS provides administrative data on the universe of specialty mental health care providers in the United States. Response rates are above 90 percent in all years. Data cover 85 019 provider/year observations. Principal Findings ACA‐Medicaid expansion increases the probability that a provider accepts Medicaid by 1.69 percentage points, 95 percent confidence interval: [0.0017,0.0321], which corresponds to an increase from 87.27 percent pre‐expansion to 90.27 percent postexpansion in expansion states or a 1.94 percent increase. We observe spillovers to Medicare, although this finding is sensitive to specification. Conclusions This study provides evidence on the impact of ACA‐Medicaid expansion on accepted forms of payment for specialty mental health care treatment. Findings suggest that expansion increases availability of providers who deliver valuable care for enrollees with severe mental illness. These findings may help policy makers reflecting on the future directions of the US health care delivery system.

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