Closing the Gap: The Impact of the Medicaid Primary Care Rate Increase on Access and Health
Closing the Gap: The Impact of the Medicaid Primary Care Rate Increase on Access and Health
Tuesday, June 12, 2018: 10:20 AM
Mountain Laurel - Garden Level (Emory Conference Center Hotel)
Discussant: Jessica Van Parys
The difficulties that Medicaid beneficiaries face accessing medical care are often attributed to the program's low reimbursement rates relative to other payers. There is little evidence, however, as to the actual effects of Medicaid payment rates for providers on access and health outcomes for beneficiaries. In this paper, we exploit time-series variation in Medicaid reimbursement rates primarily driven by the Medicaid fee bump—a provision of the Affordable Care Act mandating that states raise Medicaid payments to match Medicare rates for primary care visits for 2013 and 2014—to quantify the impact of physician payment on access to treatment. We find that increasing Medicaid payments to primary care doctors is associated with improvements in access, better self-reported health, and fewer school days missed among beneficiaries.