Volume 40 | Number 3 | June 2005

Abstract List

Yu‐Chu Shen Ph.D., Stephen Zuckerman


Objective

This study examines the effects of Medicaid payment generosity on access and care for adult and child Medicaid beneficiaries.


Data Source

Three years of the National Surveys of America's Families (1997, 1999, 2002) are linked to the Urban Institute Medicaid capitation rate surveys, the Area Resource File, and the American Hospital Association survey files.


Study Design

In order to identify the effect of payment generosity apart from unmeasured differences across areas, we compare the experiences of Medicaid beneficiaries with groups that should not be affected by Medicaid payment policies. To assure that these groups are comparable to Medicaid beneficiaries, we reweight the data using propensity score methods. We use a difference‐in‐differences model to assess the effects of Medicaid payment generosity on four categories of access and use measures (continuity of care, preventive care, visits, and perceptions of provider communication and quality of care).


Principal Findings

Higher payments increase the probability of having a usual source of care and the probability of having at least one visit to a doctor and other health professional for Medicaid adults, and produce more positive assessments of the health care received by adults and children. However, payment generosity has no effect on the other measures that we examined, such as the probability of receiving preventive care or the probability of having unmet needs.


Conclusions

Higher payment rates can improve some aspects of access and use for Medicaid beneficiaries, but the effects are not dramatic.