Impact of 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) health center investments on disadvantaged neighborhoods after recession.

IF 2.7 3区 经济学 Q1 ECONOMICS Health Economics Review Pub Date : 2024-01-31 DOI:10.1186/s13561-024-00482-x
Elizabeth L Tung, Nour Asfour, Joshua D Bolton, Elbert S Huang, Calvin Zhang, Luc Anselin
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Abstract

Background: Federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) are integral to the U.S. healthcare safety net and uniquely situated in disadvantaged neighborhoods. The 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) invested $2 billion in FQHC stimulus during the Great Recession; but it remains unknown whether this investment was associated with extended benefits for disadvantaged neighborhoods.

Methods: We used a propensity-score matched longitudinal design (2008-2012) to examine whether the 2009 ARRA FQHC investment was associated with local jobs and establishments recovery in FQHC neighborhoods. Job change data were obtained from the Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics (LEHD) survey and calculated as an annual rate per 1,000 population. Establishment change data were obtained from the National Neighborhood Data Archive (NaNDA) and calculated as an annual rate per 10,000 population. Establishment data included 4 establishment types: healthcare services, eating/drinking places, retail establishments, and grocery stores. Fixed effects were used to compare annual rates of jobs and establishments recovery between ARRA-funded FQHC census tracts and a matched control group.

Results: Of 50,381 tracts, 2,223 contained ≥ 1 FQHC that received ARRA funding. A higher proportion of FQHC tracts had an extreme poverty designation (11.6% vs. 5.4%), high unemployment rate (45.4% vs. 30.3%), and > 50% minority racial/ethnic composition (48.1% vs. 36.3%). On average, jobs grew at an annual rate of 3.84 jobs per 1,000 population (95% CI: 3.62,4.06). In propensity-score weighted models, jobs in ARRA-funded tracts grew at a higher annual rate of 4.34 per 1,000 (95% CI: 2.56,6.12) relative to those with similar social vulnerability. We observed persistent decline in non-healthcare establishments (-1.35 per 10,000; 95% CI: -1.68,-1.02); but did not observe decline in healthcare establishments.

Conclusions: Direct funding to HCs may be an effective strategy to support healthcare establishments and some jobs recovery in disadvantaged neighborhoods during recession, reinforcing the important multidimensional roles HCs play in these communities. However, HCs may benefit from additional investments that target upstream determinants of health to mitigate uneven recovery and neighborhood decline.

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2009 年《美国复苏与再投资法案》(ARRA)医疗中心投资对经济衰退后弱势社区的影响。
背景:联邦合格医疗中心(FQHC)是美国医疗安全网中不可或缺的一部分,其独特的地理位置使其处于弱势社区。2009 年《美国复苏与再投资法案》(ARRA)在经济大衰退期间投资 20 亿美元用于刺激联邦合格医疗中心的发展;但这一投资是否会给贫困社区带来更多益处仍是个未知数:我们采用倾向得分匹配纵向设计(2008-2012 年)来研究 2009 年 ARRA 家具QHC 投资是否与家具QHC 社区的当地就业和机构恢复有关。工作岗位变化数据来自纵向雇主-家庭动态(LEHD)调查,并按每千人年比率计算。机构变化数据来自国家邻里数据档案(NaNDA),以每 10,000 人口的年比率计算。机构数据包括 4 种机构类型:医疗保健服务、餐饮场所、零售机构和杂货店。固定效应用于比较 ARRA 资助的 FQHC 普查区与匹配对照组之间的工作和机构年恢复率:在 50,381 个普查区中,2,223 个普查区中有 ≥ 1 家获得 ARRA 资助的家庭保健中心。有更高比例的家庭保健中心普查区被认定为极端贫困(11.6% 对 5.4%)、失业率高(45.4% 对 30.3%)、少数民族种族/族裔比例超过 50%(48.1% 对 36.3%)。平均而言,就业岗位的年增长率为每千人 3.84 个(95% CI:3.62,4.06)。在倾向分数加权模型中,与社会脆弱性相似的地区相比,ARRA 资助地区的就业岗位年增长率更高,为每千人 4.34 个(95% CI:2.56,6.12)。我们观察到非医疗机构持续下降(每 10,000 人-1.35;95% CI:-1.68,-1.02);但没有观察到医疗机构下降:结论:在经济衰退期间,直接向医疗机构提供资金可能是支持弱势社区医疗机构和部分就业复苏的有效策略,这加强了医疗机构在这些社区发挥的重要的多维作用。然而,针对上游健康决定因素的额外投资可能会使医疗机构受益,从而缓解复苏不平衡和社区衰退的问题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.20%
发文量
59
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Economics Review is an international high-quality journal covering all fields of Health Economics. A broad range of theoretical contributions, empirical studies and analyses of health policy with a health economic focus will be considered for publication. Its scope includes macro- and microeconomics of health care financing, health insurance and reimbursement as well as health economic evaluation, health services research and health policy analysis. Further research topics are the individual and institutional aspects of health care management and the growing importance of health care in developing countries.
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