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Medicaid expansion alone does not resolve disparities in cancer care

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | May 12, 2021 Insurance
While cancer patients have experienced accelerated treatment timelines, receipt of definitive treatment for minorities and minority-serving hospitals in expansion states did not change compared to those in in non-expansion states

In the United States, Black and Latinx individuals have higher cancer mortality rates than patients of other races. Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) in 2014, many states expanded Medicaid eligibility, promising significant gains in coverage for racial minorities. But it remains largely unexplored whether Medicaid expansion has been associated with improved care at hospitals that primarily serve minority populations. A new analysis of National Cancer Database (NCDB) records conducted by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital indicates that while individuals experienced accelerated treatment timelines after the ACA, overall, hospitals that primarily serve minorities (MSHs) did not improve average delivery times for cancer treatments. The findings, published in JCO Oncology Practice, point toward the need for additional reforms to support delivery of care in under-funded health systems.

"Providing people with insurance doesn't necessarily ensure that they will get the care they deserve," said corresponding author Quoc-Dien Trinh, MD, of the Division of Urologic Surgery. "This project reminds stakeholders and policymakers that there's downstream work that has to be done beyond expanding coverage, whether in patient navigation or in making sure that people can afford to miss work to receive care when they need it."

The researchers did find that within states that expanded Medicaid, the proportion of minorities receiving treatment within 30 days increased by over 3 percent when compared to minority patients in non-expansion states. On the hospital level, however, treatment rates did not improve. Previous studies have shown that hospitals with a higher proportion of minority patients do not perform as well as non-minority-serving hospitals across a number of quality metrics. MSHs served a large proportion of under-insured patients prior to Medicaid expansion, and many remain underfunded.

To determine whether timeliness and access to cancer care improved at MSHs between 2015 and 2016, when a larger proportion of hospitals' patient populations became insured under the ACA, the researchers examined treatment records for breast, colon, lung and prostate cancer using the NCDB, a nationwide oncology registry. They were able to compare definitive treatment and time-to-treatment at MSHs in states that did and did not expand Medicaid.

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