Title: Disparities in Long-Term Care: Building Equity into Policy
1Disparities in Long-Term Care Building Equity
into Policy
- R. Tamara Konetzka, PhD
- University of Chicago
- Co-author Rachel M. Werner, MD, PhD
- Philadelphia VA and University of Pennsylvania
- Building Bridges in LTC Colloquium 2008
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3Reducing Disparities is a National Health Priority
- In 2002 Institute of Medicine released Unequal
Treatment Confronting Racial and Ethnic
Disparities in Health Care - Sustained interest by researchers, policy makers,
funding organizations, practitioners, and the
public - Not much has changed.
4LTC Disparities Overshadowed by Access and
Quality Concerns
- Growing body of evidence points to prevalent
disparities in LTC - But overall policy and access concerns have taken
precedence - Early policies focused on reimbursement
incentives to increase access for Medicaid - Last few decades focus on quality improvement and
expanding HCBC
5Use of Market-Based Incentives
- Poor quality of LTC often attributed to lack of
information on the part of consumers and lack of
competition on the part of providers - Increasingly, policies aimed at quality
improvement attempt to make health care more like
other goods - Enable consumers to shop on quality
- Providers compete to attract quality-savvy
consumers - Remove features of the market that may distort
efficient choices
6Goals
- Review and synthesize the evidence on
- Disparities in use of LTC
- Disparities in quality (conditional on use)
- Analyze market-based quality improvement
initiatives in terms of potential to affect
disparities - Suggest potential policy modifications
7What is a Disparity?
- IOM definitionracial or ethnic differences in
the quality of healthcare that are not due to
access-related factors or clinical needs,
preferences, and appropriateness of
intervention.
8IOM Differences, Disparities, and
Discrimination Populations with Equal Access to
Health Care
Clinical Appropriateness and Need Patient
Preferences
Non-Minority
Difference
The Operation of Healthcare Systems and the
Legal and Regulatory Climate
Quality of Health Care
Minority
Disparity
Discrimination Biases and Prejudice,
Stereotyping, and Uncertainty
Populations with Equal Access to Health Care
9Conceptual Approach
- Modified IOM approach
- Include differences in use/access as potential
disparities - Race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status form
overlapping but not redundant risk pools for
being underserved in the health system - Consider all pathways
- Disentangle to the extent possible
- Conceptualize LTC as independent of setting
10Methods for Review
- Searched PubMed, Web of Science, and reference
lists for papers related to - Disparities in use of LTC
- Disparities in quality of LTC conditional on use
- Any empirical research design (qualitative or
quantitative) - 54 papers included
11Disparities in Use of LTC
12Use of Nursing Homes by Race
- 1980s and early 1990s
- blacks much less likely than whites to use
nursing homes - blacks more disabled by the time they used
nursing homes - Research focused on whether this was a difference
or disparity...
13Compensating differentials?
- Blacks and Hispanics more likely to use home
health care than whites - But difference not large enough to explain lower
nursing home use - Blacks more likely to use informal care
- Blacks also more likely to report unmet need
- Difference in nursing home use was likely due (at
least in part) to differential access to care
14Different attitudes/preferences?
- Blacks express greater intent to use informal
care and greater willingness to rely on informal
networks of care - But actual size of informal care networks found
not to vary by race - And the intent/preference/norm may be endogenous
15More recent evidence
- Black/white gap in nursing home use has narrowed
- Whether it has disappeared completely or even
reversed depends on perspective - Controlling for health status and other factors,
blacks still less likely to use NH - But as percent of population, blacks rate of use
is higher - One main driver of shift whites use of assisted
living
16Use of hospice
- In early 1990s, blacks substantially less likely
to use hospice than whites - Rates of use equalized during 1990s
- But, Asians and Pacific Islanders still much less
likely to enroll in hospice - Blacks less likely than whites to re-enroll after
initial discharge
17Disparities in Use by SES
- Evidence drawn largely from studies of Medicaid
access - Nursing homes
- In 1980s and 1990s C.O.N. laws led to excess
demand situation in which Medicaid recipients
faced restricted access - Market has become much more competitive eased
access in many areas - HCBC
- dual eligibles exhibit reduced and less
appropriate utilization than Medicare-only
18Disparities in Quality of LTC
19Clinical Studies in Nursing Homes
- Compared with non-Hispanic whites...
- black and Hispanic diabetic residents
significantly less likely to receive
anti-diabetic medications - Asian/Pacific Islanders, blacks, and Hispanics at
risk for secondary stroke received
anti-coagulants less often - black nursing home residents on antipsychotic
drugs were less likely to take a
second-generation antipsychotic - black residents were less likely to be diagnosed
with and to receive treatment for depression - black residents had higher rates of pressure
sores
20But which pathway?
- Studies of disparities in quality are dominated
by nursing home studies. - Clinical studies document that disparities in
nursing home care exist. - But is this discrimination among residents by
providers? Or do racial and ethnic minorities go
to low-quality facilities? - These studies did not differentiate.
21Segregation
- Nursing homes more segregated than other health
care sectors - Nursing home segregation mirrors (and often
exceeds) residential segregation - Unequal quality across homes
- Evidence is markedly consistent Segregation
where people go for LTC-- is the likely pathway
to disparities in quality
22Disparities and Segregation
- Nursing homes in poor neighborhoods are lower
quality - The low-quality facilities tend to
- Be high Medicaid
- Be high minority
- Have more deficiencies
- Have lower staffing
- Be more likely to be terminated from
Medicare/Medicaid
23Little evidence of within-provider disparities
- Quality is generally a common good among
Medicaid and private-pay residents in the same
facility - Black/white differences in mortality disappear
when site of care is controlled
24Non-nursing-home settings
- Blacks fare significantly worse than whites in
home health outcomes (no control for agency or
neighborhood). - PACE study black mortality rates not worse than
white rates - Mixed evidence on differences in end-of-life care
quality by race, but little difference among
hospice users.
25Study Designs and Methodology
- Almost all observational, cross-sectional studies
with multivariate adjustment - Little variation in quality of designs
- Common weakness that causality cannot be
established. - More studies should use provider fixed-effects
models to determine pathway of disparities
within or across providers? - IV may also be helpful.
26Will information and competition help reduce
disparities?
- Market-based policies are aimed at improving
overall quality of care - Concerns have been raised about the potential for
disparities to be exacerbated - We know very little about this potential
empirically, especially in LTC - Concerns rooted in differential consumer and
provider response
27Accessing, Processing and Understanding
Information
- information may be more accessible to residents
who are educated or wealthy - Information may be more understandable to those
who are more educated - disparities in use of information technology may
be increasing
28Supply
- information about the quality of providers is not
useful if access to high-quality providers close
to home is restricted
29Provider resources
- Low-quality providers tend to have fewer
resources - Most QI efforts require significant financial
investments - market-based incentives may induce improvements
only in providers that are already well financed
and of high quality - Market-based incentives may also induce exit of
low-quality providers, raising potential access
issues
30Public Reporting of Quality
- Designed to provide consumers with a tool to
choose high-quality providers providers respond
to increased consumer sensitivity by competing on
quality - But disparities could increase if
- racial and ethnic minorities and low-SES
individuals less likely to access, understand,
and use quality information - Low-resource providers less able to act
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32Pay for Performance
- Often used in conjunction with public reporting
effects may be similar - In addition, bonuses paid to high-performing
providers to increase incentive - But disparities could increase even more
- High-resource providers are more able to respond
to incentives - Bonuses increase the resource gap
33Consumer-directed care
- Cash and Counseling is best LTC example
- Give consumers more control to choose/hire/fire
LTC providers, formal and informal. - Designed to increase quality, satisfaction,
efficiency
34Consumer-directed care...
- Disparities may increase if
- low-income groups are less able to navigate or
access choices and search out appropriate
caregivers - Low-income groups are more cost-sensitive
- But disparities may also decrease by
- Increasing choice among low-SES
- Inducing an increase in the supply of providers
in neighborhoods where there was little - Creating jobs in low-income neighborhoods by
paying informal caregivers
35Potential Policy Modifications
- Medical homes
- Better ways to summarize and present quality
information - Educational campaigns that target underserved,
including the availability of quality information
in Spanish - P4P rewards based on improvement as well as level
of performance - Consider subsidizing QI efforts of low-resource
providers - Continued Medicaid expansion into home- and
community-based care
36Research Priorities
- Research that explores the source or causal
pathway of existing disparities - Research that tests the effect of QI initiatives
on disparities - Research that tests policy and practice
modifications - Research on more racial and ethnic groups and on
non-nursing-home settings
37Broad Conclusions
- Residence and segregation may be more important
than differential treatment by providers in
explaining disparities in LTC -- presenting a
more difficult policy challenge. - Improving overall quality and reducing
disparities in LTC are both important but
potentially competing goals. The extent to which
they can be pursued simultaneously should be
considered explicitly in the policy debate.