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Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP

Devising effective cost-containment strategies in public insurance programs requires understanding the distribution of health care spending and characteristics of high-cost enrollees. The aim was to characterize high-cost enrollees in a state’s public insurance program and determine whether expendit...

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Autores principales: Sen, Bisakha, Blackburn, Justin, Aswani, Monica S., Morrisey, Michael A., Becker, David J., Kilgore, Meredith L., Caldwell, Cathy, Sellers, Chris, Menachemi, Nir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5798702/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27166411
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0046958016645000
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author Sen, Bisakha
Blackburn, Justin
Aswani, Monica S.
Morrisey, Michael A.
Becker, David J.
Kilgore, Meredith L.
Caldwell, Cathy
Sellers, Chris
Menachemi, Nir
author_facet Sen, Bisakha
Blackburn, Justin
Aswani, Monica S.
Morrisey, Michael A.
Becker, David J.
Kilgore, Meredith L.
Caldwell, Cathy
Sellers, Chris
Menachemi, Nir
author_sort Sen, Bisakha
collection PubMed
description Devising effective cost-containment strategies in public insurance programs requires understanding the distribution of health care spending and characteristics of high-cost enrollees. The aim was to characterize high-cost enrollees in a state’s public insurance program and determine whether expenditure inequality changes over time, or with changes in cost-sharing policies or program eligibility. We use 1999-2011 claims and enrollment data from the Alabama Children’s Health Insurance Program, ALL Kids. All children enrolled in ALL Kids were included in our study, including multiple years of enrollment (N = 1,031,600 enrollee-months). We examine the distribution of costs over time, whether this distribution changes after increases in cost sharing and expanded eligibility, patient characteristics that predict high-cost status, and examine health services used by high-cost children to identify what is preventable. The top 10% (1%) of enrollees account for about 65.5% (24.7%) of total program costs. Inpatient and outpatient costs are the largest components of costs incurred by high-cost utilizers. Non-urgent emergency department costs are a relatively small portion. Average expenditure increases over time, particularly after expanded eligibility, and the share of costs incurred by the top 10% and 1% increases slightly. Multivariable logistic regression results indicate that infants and older teens, Caucasian children, and those with chronic conditions are more likely to be high-cost utilizers. Increased cost sharing does not reduce cost concentration or average expenditure among high-cost utilizers. These findings suggest that identifying and targeting potentially preventable costs among high-cost utilizers are called for to help reduce costs in public insurance programs.
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spelling pubmed-57987022018-02-12 Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP Sen, Bisakha Blackburn, Justin Aswani, Monica S. Morrisey, Michael A. Becker, David J. Kilgore, Meredith L. Caldwell, Cathy Sellers, Chris Menachemi, Nir Inquiry Original Research Devising effective cost-containment strategies in public insurance programs requires understanding the distribution of health care spending and characteristics of high-cost enrollees. The aim was to characterize high-cost enrollees in a state’s public insurance program and determine whether expenditure inequality changes over time, or with changes in cost-sharing policies or program eligibility. We use 1999-2011 claims and enrollment data from the Alabama Children’s Health Insurance Program, ALL Kids. All children enrolled in ALL Kids were included in our study, including multiple years of enrollment (N = 1,031,600 enrollee-months). We examine the distribution of costs over time, whether this distribution changes after increases in cost sharing and expanded eligibility, patient characteristics that predict high-cost status, and examine health services used by high-cost children to identify what is preventable. The top 10% (1%) of enrollees account for about 65.5% (24.7%) of total program costs. Inpatient and outpatient costs are the largest components of costs incurred by high-cost utilizers. Non-urgent emergency department costs are a relatively small portion. Average expenditure increases over time, particularly after expanded eligibility, and the share of costs incurred by the top 10% and 1% increases slightly. Multivariable logistic regression results indicate that infants and older teens, Caucasian children, and those with chronic conditions are more likely to be high-cost utilizers. Increased cost sharing does not reduce cost concentration or average expenditure among high-cost utilizers. These findings suggest that identifying and targeting potentially preventable costs among high-cost utilizers are called for to help reduce costs in public insurance programs. SAGE Publications 2016-05-10 /pmc/articles/PMC5798702/ /pubmed/27166411 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0046958016645000 Text en © The Author(s) 2016 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 License (http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Research
Sen, Bisakha
Blackburn, Justin
Aswani, Monica S.
Morrisey, Michael A.
Becker, David J.
Kilgore, Meredith L.
Caldwell, Cathy
Sellers, Chris
Menachemi, Nir
Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP
title Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP
title_full Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP
title_fullStr Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP
title_full_unstemmed Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP
title_short Health Expenditure Concentration and Characteristics of High-Cost Enrollees in CHIP
title_sort health expenditure concentration and characteristics of high-cost enrollees in chip
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5798702/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27166411
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0046958016645000
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