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Influence of Medical Insurance Under the Affordable Care Act on Access to Pain Management of the Trauma Patient
  1. Daniel H. Wiznia, MD*,
  2. Theodore Zaki, BS*,
  3. Julianna Maisano*,
  4. Chang-Yeon Kim, MS, BS*,
  5. Thomas M. Halaszynski, DMD, MD, MBA and
  6. Michael P. Leslie, DO*
  1. *Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation
  2. Department of Adult and Perioperative Anesthesiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT
  1. correspondence: Daniel H. Wiznia, MD, Yale Physicians Group, 800 Howard Ave, 1st Floor, New Haven, CT 06510 (e-mail: daniel.wiznia{at}yale.edu).

Abstract

Background and Objectives The Affordable Care Act intended to “extend affordable coverage” and “ensure access” for vulnerable patient populations. This investigation examined whether the type of insurance (Medicaid, Medicare, Blue Cross, cash pay) carried by trauma patients influences access to pain management specialty care.

Methods Investigators phoned 443 board-certified pain specialists, securing office visits with 235 pain physicians from 8 different states. Appointments for pain management were for a patient who sustained an ankle fracture requiring surgery and experiencing difficulty weaning off opioids. Offices were phoned 4 times assessing responses to the 4 different payment methodologies.

Results Fifty-three percent of pain specialists contacted (235 of 443) were willing to see new patients to manage pain medication. Within the 53% of positive responses, 7.2% of physicians scheduled appointments for Medicaid patients, compared with 26.8% for cash-paying patients, 39.6% for those with Medicare, and 41.3% with Blue Cross (P < 0.0001). There were no differences in appointment access between states that had expanded Medicaid eligibility for low-income adults versus states that had not expanded Medicaid eligibility. Neither Medicaid nor Medicare reimbursement levels for new patient visits correlated with ability to schedule an appointment or influenced wait times.

Conclusions Access to pain specialists for management of pain medication in the postoperative trauma patient proved challenging. Despite the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid patients still experienced curtailed access to pain specialists and confronted the highest incidence of barriers to receiving appointments.

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Footnotes

  • The study was approved by Yale University Institutional Review Board (no. 13637).

    No funding sources were used for this study.

    The authors declare no conflict of interest.

    Supplemental digital content is available for this article. Direct URL citations appear in the printed text and are provided in the HTML and PDF versions of this article on the journal's Web site (www.rapm.org).