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Arpita Chattopadhyay, Ph.D. & Andrew B. Bindman, MD

Contribution of Medicaid Managed Care to the Increasing Undercount of Medicaid Beneficiaries in the Current Population Survey. Arpita Chattopadhyay, Ph.D. & Andrew B. Bindman, MD Primary Care Research Center & the Division of General Internal Medicine University of California, San Francisco.

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Arpita Chattopadhyay, Ph.D. & Andrew B. Bindman, MD

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  1. Contribution of Medicaid Managed Care to the Increasing Undercount of Medicaid Beneficiaries in the Current Population Survey Arpita Chattopadhyay, Ph.D. & Andrew B. Bindman, MD Primary Care Research Center & the Division of General Internal Medicine University of California, San Francisco

  2. Background • CPS is an important source of data for comparing beneficiaries across insurance groups • CPS routinely underestimates the size of Medicaid beneficiaries. • This affects Medicaid counts, AND estimates of one or both uninsured/privately insured groups. • The extent of Medicaid undercount has been increasing over time • At the same time managed care has increased in Medicaid

  3. Study Objective • To determine if Medicaid managed care is associated with the undercount of Medicaid beneficiaries in the CPS. StudyPopulation • Medicaid beneficiaries in California < 65 years • Approximately 16% of Medicaid beneficiaries in the country Study Period • 1995-1999: A period of managed care expansion among Medicaid beneficiaries in California

  4. Data • Current Population Survey 1996-2000 • Have you had Medicaid in the past year? • For how many months did you have Medicaid last year? • Medi-Cal Monthly Eligibility Files 1995-1999 • Monthly enrollment data with information on county and health plan

  5. Calculating the Size of the Medicaid Population CPS estimate = (S wi * mcaidi*monthsi)/12 wi = individual weight; mcaidi=1 if the ith respondent ever had Medicaid the previous year; 0 otherwise; monthsi= No. of months the ith respondent had Medicaid the previous year MMEF count = S No. of beneficiary each month/12

  6. Method • Person-Year estimates of Medicaid beneficiaries for the years 1995 to 1999 derived from CPS • Compared to annual counts (person-years) of Medicaid beneficiaries from administrative records for the same years • County level estimates from CPS derived for 24 of the 58 California counties and a “super county” consisting of the 34 remaining counties

  7. Variable Definition Dependent Variable: Percentage of CPS undercount Yit = 100*(MMEF countit-CPS estimateit)/MMEF countit i=1….25; t=1…5; Where ‘i’ represents a county/super-county & ‘t’ represents year Explanatory variables: Managed care penetration MCPit = (MMEF managed care countit/ MMEFit)*100 Year 1995-1999

  8. Model Yit = a0+a1MCPit+a2YEAR +eit; i=1….25; t=1…5; Where a0 is the intercept term; a1 and a2 are coefficients associated with managed care penetration and year; eit is the error term with a variance component correlation structure

  9. Medicaid Population Aged < 65 Years Estimated from Current Population Survey (CPS) and Medicaid Monthly Eligibility File (MMEF) Source: Current Population Survey 1996-2000 & Medical Care Statistics Section, Department of Health Services, California

  10. Unadjusted Association Between Percent Underestimate in Medicaid Beneficiaries <65 Years from the Current Population Survey (CPS) and Medicaid Monthly Eligibility Files (MMEF) 1995-1999 Source: Current Population Survey (CPS) 1996-2000 and California Department of Health Services Medicaid Monthly Eligibility File (MMEF)1995-1999. Percent underestimate corresponds to CPS estimate as compared to MMEF counts as gold-standard

  11. Estimated Coefficients for Current Population Survey (CPS) Underestimate of Medicaid Population <65 Years Source: Current Population Survey 1996-2000 & Medical Care Statistics Section, Department of Health Services, California Note: 1 Regressions were weighted by CPS sample size.2 Robust standard errors

  12. Implication • National data show that during 1995-1997 • Medicaid managed care penetration increased by 18.4% • Underestimate of Medicaid beneficiaries increased by 9% • Applying our results to national data implies that • 0.4*18.4= 7.4% increase in the underestimate of Medicaid beneficiaries in the CPS can be attributed to increases in managed care penetration • Thus Medicaid managed care explains more than 80% ( 7.4% of 9.0%) of the increasing underestimates of Medicaid beneficiaries in the CPS

  13. Conclusion • The CPS underestimated the Medicaid population by approximately a third during the study period. • At the county level, each percentage point increase in the penetration of managed care was associated with an underestimate in the CPS of 0.4 percentage points. • Medicaid managed care explains more than 80% of the increasing undercount of Medicaid beneficiaries in CPS

  14. Relevance for Survey Design • Include question on health plan characteristics to improve estimates of Medicaid population in CPS

  15. Limitations • Single state study • Unable to exclude institutional population from administrative records • County level estimates from CPS are not always stable • Finally, confounding by some other county characteristic remains a possibility

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