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The Affordable Care Act Dependent Coverage Expansion (ACA-DCE): Disparities in impact in young adult oncology patients.

Published Web Location

https://ascopubs.org/doi/10.1200/JCO.2017.35.15_suppl.6561
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Abstract

6561 Background: Private health insurance is associated with improved outcomes in cancer patients. We know little, however, about the impact of the ACA-DCE, which extended private insurance to young adults (up to age 26) beginning in 2010, on the insurance status of young adults with cancer. This study sought to determine the effect of the ACA-DCE on having private insurance coverage among hospitalized young adult oncology patients. Methods: We performed a retrospective, population-based analysis of hospitalized young adult oncology patients (22-30 years-old) in California during 2006-2014 (n = 11,062) using the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development database. Multivariable regression analyses examined the social and clinical predictors of having private insurance. Results are presented as adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs). A difference-in-difference analysis examined the influence of the ACA-DCE on insurance coverage by race/ethnicity and zip code federal poverty level. Results: Multivariable regression demonstrated patients of black and Hispanic race/ethnicity were less likely to have private insurance both before and after the ACA-DCE, compared to non-Hispanic white patients. Younger age (22-25 years) was associated with having private insurance after the ACA-DCE implementation (OR 1.18, CI 1.05-1.33; reference, 27-30 years). In the difference-in-difference analysis, private insurance increased among non-Hispanic whites aged 22-25 living in medium- (2006-2009: 64.6% versus (vs) 2011-2014: 69.1%; p = 0.003) and high-income zip codes (80.4% vs 82%; p = 0.043) and among Asian patients aged 22-25 living in high-income zip codes (73.2 vs 85.7%; p = 0.022). Private insurance decreased for all Hispanic patients aged 22-25 between the two time periods. Conclusions: The ACA-DCE provision was an important first step in increasing coverage, but it was not universal and generated disparity in coverage as gains occurred for non-Hispanic white and Asian patients living in higher income zip codes. This policy change was shown to increase coverage for a traditionally underinsured population and attention should now focus on those remaining uninsured.

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