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Sunday, September 10, 2023 | The Latest Research, Commentary, And News From Health Affairs
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Dear John, This week on The Other 80 podcast, Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil joined Claudia Williams to discuss how states use Medicaid, the keys to successful implementation of whole person health care for greater community impact, and missed opportunities to understand and solve for the roots of inequity.
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The September issue of Health Affairs was released this week, featuring articles that expand our understanding of the growing levels of enrollment in Medicare Advantage (MA), provide insights into health care prices and patient cost sharing, explore the role of hospice for people with dementia, and more.
Medicare
MA benchmarks, which are established on the basis of traditional Medicare spending, play a central role in determining how much MA plans are paid.
Adverse selection into traditional Medicare can artificially inflate MA benchmarks, a phenomenon distinct from upcoding.
Analyzing benchmark rates, Andrew Ryan and coauthors conclude that "favorable selection into MA led to underpayments for counties with lower MA penetration and overpayments to counties with higher MA penetration."
Meanwhile, MA enrollment has shifted to counties with higher MA penetration. The net result is overpayments to MA plans of nearly $10 billion per year between 2017 and 2020.
Rapid growth in MA enrollment is largely due to enrollees switching from traditional Medicare to MA, according to analysis by Lanlan Xu and colleagues.
Although overall Medicare enrollment increases account for some MA growth, examining enrollment data from the period 2006–22, the authors find that "the share of MA enrollment growth due to switching was 80 percent or more each year from 2020 to 2022 compared with 61–79 percent in the ten years before then."
In addition, enrollees who switch into MA from traditional Medicare are disproportionately healthy, whereas those who switch out of MA are disproportionately less healthy.
In a DataWatch, Jeffrey Marr and coauthors find that MA enrollees were almost 25 percent less likely than traditional Medicare enrollees to receive multiple home-based medical care visits in 2018.
In contrast, MA enrollees were thirty-one times as likely to have exactly one such visit, which could reflect efforts to identify unmet needs or to identify diagnoses that allow for larger risk-adjustment payments.
Jeah Jung and coauthors compare how many health care resources are used by enrollees in MA and traditional Medicare.
Examining treatment patterns for specific conditions, they find that resource use was lower in 2019 among MA enrollees for twenty-three of the thirty-three examined conditions, with use ranging from 2 percent to 12 percent lower
among those conditions, primarily as a result of lower use of hospital inpatient care.
Resource use among MA enrollees was higher for imaging and testing services than it was for enrollees in traditional Medicare.
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If you haven't already, join Health Affairs Unlimited to access our current and past issues and our premium newsletters and virtual events.
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Health Affairs Branded Post:
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Introducing: Research and Justice For All
Research and Justice For All is a new podcast from Health Affairs that provides perspectives on how to dismantle unjust systems and structures that have long impacted health outcomes in historically marginalized populations. Hear how to challenge injustices in health care – rooted in racism, sexism, ableism, and other forms of exclusion – through
research, evidence, community-building, and other potential and innovative solutions.
The first season, sponsored by CVS Health, is cohosted by Sree Chaguturu, Chief Medical Officer (CVS Health) and Joneigh Khaldun, Chief Health Equity Officer (CVS Health).
The show features C-Suite level executives including Karen DeSalvo (Google), Rashad Burgess (Gilead Sciences), Thomas D. Sequist (Massachusetts General Brigham), as they discuss private-sector initiatives and responsibility to advance health equity.
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Next week, join us for the following event:
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Health Affairs' Michael Gerber and Chris Fleming discuss the Biden administration's proposal to increase minimum staffing levels at nursing homes.
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About Health Affairs
Health Affairs is the leading peer-reviewed journal at the intersection of health, health care, and policy. Published monthly by Project HOPE, the journal is available in print and online. Late-breaking
content is also found through healthaffairs.org, Health Affairs Today, and Health Affairs Sunday Update.
Project HOPE is a global health and humanitarian relief organization that places power in the hands of local health care workers to save lives across the globe. Project HOPE has published Health Affairs since 1981.
Copyright © Project HOPE: The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc. Health Affairs, 1220 19th Street, NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036, United States
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