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Informing Medicaid Policy With Cancerrelated Health Services Research

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Advanced-stage disease. Receipt of disparate care/ Resource depletion. Early Stage Diagnosis ... Medicaid and Ohio Cancer Incidence Surveillance System (OCISS) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Informing Medicaid Policy With Cancerrelated Health Services Research


1
Informing Medicaid Policy With Cancer-related
Health Services Research
  • Siran M. Koroukian, Ph.D.
  • Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
  • Case Western Reserve University

2
Background
  • Disparities in cancer-related outcomes by
    Medicaid status have been documented Medicaid
    beneficiaries are more likely than their
    non-Medicaid counterparts to
  • be diagnosed with advanced stages of cancer
  • to receive disparate cancer treatment and
    follow-up care
  • gt to experience poor prognosis

3
Conceptual Framework
  • Patient Sociodemographics
  • Age, Race/Ethnicity, Sex,
  • Insurance Status
  • Medicaid Status

Cancer-related outcomes
Cancer Stage at Diagnosis
Access to and use of cancer screening services
Disparate cancer treatment and follow-up care
Access to and use of services for cancer
treatment and follow-up care
4
Insurance status, Medicaid status, and
cancer-related outcomes
Early Stage Diagnosis
Adequate access to and use of health services
Favorable outcomes/ good prognosis
Insured
Receipt of adequate care
Insurance Status
Uninsured/ Underinsured
Unfavorable Outcome/ Poor Prognosis
Advanced-stage disease
Inadequate access to and use of health services
HIGH OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENDITURES /
POVERTY/ RESOURCE DEPLETION
Receipt of disparate care/ Resource depletion
?
?
?
?
PARTICIPATION IN MEDICAID
5
Policy Questions
  • Is Medicaid status associated with poor cancer
    (disease) related outcomes?
  • gt Evaluate the effectiveness of the Medicaid
    program in cancer (disease) prevention and
    control
  • CHALLENGING HYPOTHESIS PARTICIPATION IN MEDICAID
    IS ASSOCIATED WITH IMPROVED CANCER-RELATED
    OUTCOMES

6
Cancer as a CASE STUDY to examine policy-relevant
questions
  • Difficulty to extract relevant disease
    information for other clinical entities to
    conduct policy analysis
  • Availability of data from cancer registry ?
    information on when cancer was diagnosed, and the
    stage at which it was diagnosed (disease
    prevention)
  • Cancer screening services
  • Availability of well-established treatment
    protocols for some of the most common cancers ?
    comparisons between treatment received and
    guidelines, using claims data (disease control)
  • Cancer treatment and follow-up care
  • Quality of care
  • Disease burden

7
Developing the linked Medicaid and Ohio Cancer
Incidence Surveillance System (OCISS)
  • Linked database to mirror the SEER Medicare files
    at the Federal level, enabling the development of
    longitudinal records at the patient level to
    study patterns of enrollment in Medicaid and use
    of health services.
  • Patient unique identifier in Medicaid to link
    enrollment and claims data across different time
    spans and service types.
  • Linkage algorithm using patient identifiers
  • Patient first and last name
  • Date of birth
  • Social security number
  • Project approved by the Institutional Review
    Board at the Ohio Department of Health and by the
    Ohio Department of Job and Family Services

8
Description of the OCISS
  • OCISS Mandatory reporting of all incident cases
    of cancer (except insitu cervical, squamous cell
    and basal cell carcinoma), since January, 1992
  • Relevant data elements include
  • Patient demographics
  • Patient residence at the time of diagnosis
  • Type of cancer
  • Date of cancer at diagnosis
  • Cancer stage
  • Surgical treatment

9
Medicaid files
  • Enrollment data ?
  • Date of enrollment in Medicaid
  • Length of participation in Medicaid prior to
    cancer diagnosis
  • Claims data ?
  • Health care utilization
  • Screening
  • Treatment (surgical radiation therapy
    chemotherapy)
  • Follow-up care

10
Study 1 Assessing the effectiveness of Medicaid
in breast and cervical cancer prevention
  • Analysis of cancer stage at diagnosis by timing
    of enrollment in Medicaid.
  • Given that Medicaid is a safety net program,
    does it matter that we look at the timing of
    enrollment in Medicaid in relation to cancer
    diagnosis?

Koroukian SM. Assessing the effectiveness of
Medicaid in breast and cervical cancer
prevention. Journal of Public Health Management
and Practice, 2003 9(4) 306-314.
11
Figure 1 Proportion of women with advanced-stage
breast and cervical cancer at the time of
diagnosis, by Medicaid status
Diagnosed with Distant Metastases and 95
Confidence Interval
Medicaid Status
12
Figure 2 Proportion of women with advanced-stage
breast and cervical cancer at the time of
diagnosis, by Medicaid status, and by timing of
enrollment in the Medicaid program in relation to
cancer diagnosis
Diagnosed with Distant Metastases and 95
Confidence Interval
Medicaid Post-Diagnosis
Medicaid, Pre-Diagnosis
Medicaid Peri-Diagnosis
Non-Medicaid
Medicaid Status and Timing of Enrollment in
Medicaid
Peri-Diagnosis Women enrolled in Medicaid in
the 2 months prior to, upon, or in the 2 months
following cancer diagnosis Post-Diagnosis
Women enrolled in Medicaid 3 months after cancer
diagnosis
13
Study conclusions and implications
  • Women enrolled in Medicaid shortly before, at, or
    after cancer diagnosis are significantly more
    likely to present with advanced-stages of the
    disease.
  • Implications
  • Methodological importance to account for timing
    of enrollment in Medicaid when identifying
    patients by Medicaid status
  • Policy Medicaid as a safety net program.
    Could/should Medicaid reach out to the uninsured
    and the underinsured?
  • Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection
    Program Who are the individuals presenting to
    Medicaid with advanced stages of cancer? Gaining
    better understanding of high risk populations and
    develop more effective targeting strategies for
    cancer screening.

14
Study 2 Does length of enrollment in Medicaid
matter that people receive cancer screening
services?
  • Participation in the Medicaid program for the
    short term, and/or on a on/off basis does not
    benefit the patient
  • Participation in Medicaid for the longer term may
    be associated with
  • Continuity of care
  • Increased likelihood to use services that are in
    the realm of preventive/screening/routine/follow-u
    p care

Koroukian SM. Length of Enrollment in Medicaid
Predicts the Use of Screening Mammography Among
Ohio Medicaid Beneficiaries. Accepted for
Publication, J Clin Epidemiol.
15
Mammography Screening in the Ohio Medicaid
Population by Length of Enrollment in Medicaid
Women 40-64 years of age, with no participation
in Managed Care programs, Medicare or spenddown,
and no stay in nursing homes after enrollment in
Medicaid
16
Women with At Least One Screening Mammography in
the 8-year Period, 1992-1999, by length of
enrollment in Medicaid
Women 40-64 years of age, with no participation
in Managed Care programs, Medicare or spenddown,
and no stay in nursing homes
17
Frequency of Screening Mammography in the 8-year
Period, 1992-1999, by length of enrollment in
Medicaid
Women 40-64 years of age, with no participation
in Managed Care programs, Medicare or spenddown,
and no stay in nursing homes after enrollment in
Medicaid
18
Average Number of Mammography Exams per Year by
Length of Enrollment in Medicaid
Women 40-64 years of age, with no participation
in Managed Care programs, Medicare or spenddown,
and no stay in nursing homes
19
Conclusions and study implications
  • Increased length of enrollment in Medicaid is
    associated with greater likelihood to undergo
    screening
  • Additional analysis needed to determine whether
    increased use of screening services reflects
    continuity of care
  • Implications
  • Methodological Importance to account for length
    of participation in Medicaid in studying use of
    screening/preventive services
  • Policy Promote/facilitate sustained enrollment
    in Medicaid in order to enhance continuity of
    care

20
Cancer-related studies to inform Medicaid on
other methodological issues
  • Ability of claims to identify incident cases of
    breast cancer (Koroukian SM et al. HSR Journal
    2003 38(3) 947-960).

21
Discussion
  • Cancer as a case study. The findings are likely
    to also apply to other clinical entities.
  • If participation of the underinsured and
    uninsured in the Medicaid program is associated
    with improved outcomes, perhaps consider
    proactive recruitment of individuals with
    potentially poor patterns of access to care into
    the Medicaid program.

22
Future Studies
  • Gain a better understanding of the uninsured and
    underinsured populations in this case,
    individuals joining the Medicaid program upon
    being diagnosed with catastrophic illness.
  • Study funded by an American Cancer Society grant
    underway to examine the characteristics of this
    population in association with community
    attributes, such as poverty and education.
  • Gain a better understanding on the effectiveness
    of Medicaid in cancer prevention and control. A
    new study funded by the NCI (K07 CA096705) to
    examine differences in cancer-related outcomes in
    low-income Medicare beneficiaries is
    participation associated with improved outcomes?
  • Cost burden to the Medicaid program
  • Quality of care
  • Access urban vs. rural
  • Availability of health care resources (e.g.,
    radiation oncologists in association with breast
    conserving surgery hospital type and practice
    patterns in cancer treatment and follow-up care)

23
Acknowledgments
  • The National Cancer Institute (F32 CA84621)
  • American Cancer Society (IRG - 91-022-09)
  • Collaborators
  • Gregory S. Cooper, M.D.
  • Alfred A. Rimm, Ph.D.
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