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Homelessness and Medicaid Churn
Author(s) -
Isaac Dapkins,
Saul Blecker
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ethnicity and disease
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1945-0826
pISSN - 1049-510X
DOI - 10.18865/ed.31.1.89
Subject(s) - medicaid , medicine , population , diagnosis code , family medicine , demography , gerontology , environmental health , health care , political science , sociology , law
Objectives: To identify ICD-10-CM di­agnostic codes associated with the social de­terminants of health (SDOH), determine fre­quency of use of the code for homelessness across time, and examine the frequency of interrupted periods of Medicaid eligibility (ie, Medicaid churn) for beneficiaries with and without this code.Design: Retrospective data analyses of New York State (NYS) Medicaid claims data for years 2006-2017 to determine reliable indicators of SDOH hypothesized to affect Medicaid churn, and for years 2016-2017 to examine frequency of Medicaid churn among patients with and without an indica­tor for homelessness.Methods: Analyses were conducted to assess the frequency of use and pattern of New York State Medicaid claims submission for SDOH codes. Analyses were conducted for Medicaid claims submitted for years 2016-2017 for Medicaid patients with and without a homeless code (ie, ICD-10-CM Z59.0) in 2017.Main Outcome Measures: Any interrup­tion in the eligibility for Medicaid insurance (Medicaid churn), assessed via client identi­fication numbers (CIN) for continuity.Results: ICD-9-CM / ICD-10-CM codes for lack of housing / homelessness demonstrat­ed linear reliability over time (ie, for years 2006-2017) with increased usage. In 2016- 2017, 22.9% of New York Medicaid patients with a homelessness code in 2017 experi­enced at least one interruption of Medicaid eligibility, while 18.8% of Medicaid patients without a homelessness code experienced Medicaid churn.Conclusions: Medicaid policies would do well to take into consideration the barriers to continued enrollment for the Medicaid population. Measures ought to be enacted to reduce Medicaid churn, especially for individuals experiencing homelessness. Ethn Dis.2021;31(1):89-96; doi:10.18865/ ed.31.1.89

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