Caring for the New Uninsured: Hospital Charity Care for the Elderly without Coverage

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Caring for the New Uninsured: Hospital Charity Care for the Elderly without Coverage. Academy Health Annual Research Meeting Tuesday June 27, 2006 Derek DeLia, Ph.D. Rutgers Center for State Health Policy. Acknowledgments. Funding from Johnson & Johnson, Inc. Comments & contributions from: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Caring for the New Uninsured:Hospital Charity Care for the Elderly

without Coverage

Academy Health Annual Research Meeting Tuesday June 27, 2006

Derek DeLia, Ph.D.Rutgers Center for State Health Policy

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Acknowledgments

• Funding from Johnson & Johnson, Inc. • Comments & contributions from:

Cecilia HuangJohn GantnerSusan ReinhardJasmine RizzoMichael YedidiaJoel Cantor

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The Elderly without Coverage

• Medicare as “universal insurance” for the elderly

• 350,000 people in the U.S. elderly & uninsured in 2000 (Mold, Fryer, & Thomas, 2004)

Mix of individuals not eligible for MedicareImmigrants, Unusual work history May also be Medicaid ineligible

• Likely rely on hospital charity care• Little data to describe extent & trends in use• Hospital CC database in NJ

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Study objectives

1. Describe prevalence & growth in hospital CC use by the elderly.

2. Compare CC use by the elderly (65+) to corresponding use by children (0-18) & non-elderly adults (19-64).

3. Compare CC costs & services used by the elderly to other age groups.

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Study population & data

• Hospital charity care claims data in NJ, 1999-2004

• Hospital Charity Care Program• Subsidies for CC to qualified low-income

uninsured residents• Payment rate based on discounted Medicaid

rates• Full Medicaid charges as “conservative”

estimate of CC costs• Inflation adjusted to 2004 $ using MC-CPI

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Major finding 1:

CC use by the elderly has grown very rapidly.

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Use of hospital CC by the elderly in NJ, 1999 vs. 2004

1999 2004 %Change

Outpatient visits 19,050 49,139 158%

Inpatient admissions

1,815 3,356 85%

Inpatient days 19,021 22,813 20%

Costs (Inflation-adjusted Medicaid charges)

$26m $48m 86%

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Major finding 2:

The elderly have surpassed children in their use of CC.

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Non-elderly adults are the primary users of hospital CC.

"Typical" division of CC use by age

Elderly Non-elderly adults Children

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Percentage of outpatient CC visits attributable to children vs. elderly

patients in NJ, 1999-2004

0%1%2%3%4%5%6%7%8%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Children Elderly

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Percentage of inpatient CC admissions attributable to children vs. elderly

patients

0%1%2%3%4%5%6%7%8%9%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Children Elderly

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Percentage of inpatient CC days attributable to children vs. elderly

patients

0%1%2%3%4%5%6%7%8%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Children Elderly

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Percentage of CC “costs” attributable to children vs. elderly patients

(Costs = Inflation-adjusted Medicaid charges)

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

7%

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Children Elderly

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Major finding 3:

Elderly CC patients use a different mix of services and

generate a different distribution of costs.

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Most Common Major Diagnostic Categories for Inpatient CC users

by Age, 2004

0% 10% 20% 30% 40%

Kidney/urinary

Nerv/sense org

Circulatory syst

Pregnancy/birth

MH/subst abuse

Percentage of inpatient CC users by age

Elderly Non-elderly adults Children

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Average costs per inpatient CC admission by age group, 2004

$3,501

$5,356

$7,061

Children Non-elderly adults Elderly

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Distribution of inpatient CC costs by age group, 2004

0.0

001

.000

2.0

003

Den

sity

0 10000 20000 30000 40000Dollars per patient

Children Non-elderly adultsElderly

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Average costs per outpatient CC visit by age group, 2004

$279

$441$492

Children Non-elderly adults Elderly

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Distribution of outpatient CC costs by age group, 2004

0.0

01.0

02.0

03.0

04D

ensi

ty

0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500Dollars per patient

Children Non-elderly adultsElderly

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Implications for SN hospitals• Use of CC by the elderly more common & more

expensive

==> higher costs per case==> greater financial burden on SN hospitals==> Shift to different service mix ==> increased demand for unreimbursed

services addressing needs of the elderly

• Similar trends in other states?SCHIP, Aging population, Immigration

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Potential policy responses

• Medicare expansionEconomic constraintsPolitical constraints (coverage for immigrants)

• Direct SN supportGrowing demand for unreimbursed careHigh need/high cost population

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