ROLE OF CANCER HISTORY AND GENDER IN MAJOR HEALTH INSURANCE TRANSITIONS: A LONGITUDINAL NATIONALLY REPRESENTATIVE STUDY.

Katherine S Virgo, Chun Chieh Lin, Amy Davidoff, Gery P Guy, Janet S de Moor, Donatus U Ekwueme, Erin E Kent, Neetu Chawla, K Robin Yabroff
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Abstract

Purpose –: To examine associations by gender between cancer history and major health insurance transitions (gains and losses), and relationships between insurance transitions and access to care.

Methodology –: Longitudinal 2008-2013 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data pooled yielding 2,223 cancer survivors and 50,692 individuals with no cancer history ages 18-63 years upon survey entry, with gender-specific sub-analyses. Access-to-care implications of insurance loss or gain were compared by cancer history and gender.

Findings –: Initially uninsured cancer survivors were significantly more likely to gain insurance coverage than individuals with no cancer history (RR: 1.25; 95% CI: 1.08-1.44). Females in particular were significantly more likely to gain insurance (unmarried RR: 1.16; 95% CI: 1.06-1.28; married RR: 1.09; 95% CI: 1.02-1.16). Significantly higher rates of difficulty accessing needed medical care and prescription medications were reported by those remaining uninsured, those who lost insurance, and women in general. Remaining uninsured, losing insurance, and male gender were associated with lack of a usual source of care.

Research implications –: Additional outreach to disadvantaged populations is needed to improve access to affordable insurance and medical care. Future longitudinal studies should assess whether major Affordable Care Act (ACA) provisions enacted after the 2008-2013 study period (or those of ACA's replacement) are addressing these important issues.

Originality –: Loss of health insurance coverage can reduce health care access resulting in poor health outcomes. Cancer survivors may be particularly at risk of insurance coverage gaps due to the long-term chronic disease trajectory. This study is novel in exploring associations between cancer history by gender and health insurance transitions, both gains and losses, in a national non-elderly adult sample.

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癌症史和性别在主要医疗保险转型中的作用:一项具有全国代表性的纵向研究。
目的:按性别研究癌症病史与主要医疗保险过渡(收益和损失)之间的关系,以及保险过渡与获得护理之间的关系。方法——2008-2013年医疗支出小组纵向调查数据汇总,得出2223名癌症幸存者和50692名无癌症病史的个体,年龄在18-63岁之间,并进行性别特异性亚分析。根据癌症病史和性别比较了保险损失或收益对获得信用卡的影响。研究结果-:与没有癌症病史的人相比,最初没有保险的癌症幸存者获得保险的可能性更大(RR:1.25;95%CI:1.08-1.44)。尤其是女性更容易获得保险(未婚RR:1.16;95%CI:1.06-1.28;已婚RR:1.09;95%CI:0.02--1.16)。获得所需医疗护理的困难率显著更高处方药是由那些没有保险的人、那些失去保险的人和一般女性报告的。没有保险、失去保险和男性与缺乏通常的护理来源有关。研究意义——需要向弱势群体提供更多的服务,以改善获得负担得起的保险和医疗服务的机会。未来的纵向研究应评估2008-2013年研究期后颁布的《平价医疗法案》(ACA)主要条款(或ACA的替代条款)是否解决了这些重要问题。独创性——失去医疗保险可能会减少获得医疗保健的机会,导致健康状况不佳。由于长期慢性病的发展轨迹,癌症幸存者可能特别面临保险覆盖缺口的风险。这项研究在全国非老年成年人样本中探索癌症性别史与健康保险转变(包括收益和损失)之间的关联是新颖的。
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Health and Health Care Inequities, Infectious Diseases and Social Factors Trends in Health Disparities of Rural Latinos Pre- and Post-Accountable Care Organization Implementation. Race, Ethnicity, Gender and Other Social Characteristics as Factors in Health and Health Care Disparities Prelims Index
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