2021
DOI: 10.1001/jamahealthforum.2021.2531
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Changes in Out-of-Pocket Spending and Catastrophic Health Care Expenditures Associated With Medicare Eligibility

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Cited by 12 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 6 publications
(8 reference statements)
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“…5 Like many areas of health care, spending by private insurers may be even higher. 6 , 7 In 2007, for example, total monthly health care spending was approximately twice as high for privately insured patients just after they started dialysis compared with those insured by Medicare; the same was true of per-person per-year net cost in 2011, a statistic that we updated in this study using contemporary data. 1 , 2 Previous research has reported that the median price paid by employer-sponsored plans for a single hemodialysis session is more than 6 times the base rate paid by Medicare for the same service.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 76%
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“…5 Like many areas of health care, spending by private insurers may be even higher. 6 , 7 In 2007, for example, total monthly health care spending was approximately twice as high for privately insured patients just after they started dialysis compared with those insured by Medicare; the same was true of per-person per-year net cost in 2011, a statistic that we updated in this study using contemporary data. 1 , 2 Previous research has reported that the median price paid by employer-sponsored plans for a single hemodialysis session is more than 6 times the base rate paid by Medicare for the same service.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 76%
“…As treatment for a chronic condition, dialysis care is expensive: annual Medicare spending per patient receiving hemodialysis was $93 200 in 2018 . Like many areas of health care, spending by private insurers may be even higher . In 2007, for example, total monthly health care spending was approximately twice as high for privately insured patients just after they started dialysis compared with those insured by Medicare; the same was true of per-person per-year net cost in 2011, a statistic that we updated in this study using contemporary data .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…These age ranges were chosen to evaluate for trends in outcomes of interest before and after age 65 years, consistent with prior research which utilized a similar study design. 8,9 These datasets are uniquely suited for this analysis as they are the only sources of nationally-representative data that enable the identification of patients who have undergone surgery. These also include detailed information on financial outcomes of interest and detailed demographic data that are highly associated with financial outcomes.…”
Section: Methods Data Source and Study Cohortmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another analysis, in 2004, reported that universal healthcare at age 65 years was associated with reductions in disparities for lowerincome adults [42]. More recent work has shown that Medicare eligibility improves access and affordability [12], reduces medical debt [43], decreases out-of-pocket spending [44], reduces catastrophic expenditures for patients hospitalized with surgical conditions [45], and also reduces racial disparities in insurance coverage, access to care, and self-reported health [46]. Our work extends upon this evidence by examining the effects of Medicare eligibility specifically by income status (low-versus higher-income), while also estimating the effects of Medicare enrollmentAU : PleasenotethatasperPLOSstyle; italicsshouldnotbeusedforemphasis:Hence; theitali , in a contemporary, post-ACA population of US adults.…”
Section: Plos Medicinementioning
confidence: 99%