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October 21, 2005|Volume 34, Number 8


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Researcher finds lower payments for treatment affect kind of care Medicaid patients receive

In a study of access to specialty healthcare by the uninsured and publicly insured in New Haven, Yale researchers found that recent state budget cuts, out-of-date provider rates and other policy changes caused a decline in care by private practice physicians.

"When we noticed that under-insured and publicly insured patients were having increasing difficulty obtaining timely referrals to a variety of specialty physicians, we grew concerned that HMOs were paying low rates for these patients," says the study's lead author, Kari Hartwig, assistant clinical professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (EPH) at the School of Medicine.

Hartwig, co-author Marie Harris and the Greater New Haven Partnership for a Healthy Community (GNHPHC) worked with New Haven Legal Services to obtain disclosure of the rates Department of Social Services contractor HMOs pay specialists for treating Medicaid patients. The HMOs under state contract had argued that rates were proprietary and should not be disclosed.

The figures, released by order of Governor M. Jodi Rell on Oct. 18, revealed that HMOs and the state are indeed paying doctors less for treating Medicaid patients than private insurers pay for comparable services.

The GNHPHC is a consortium of community health centers, area hospitals, the health department, EPH and other community health agencies. The group documented the experiences of New Haven area safety-net providers referring uninsured, Medicaid and SAGA (State-Administered General Assistance) patients for specialty services in gastroenterology (GI) and cardiology since Connecticut state budget cuts in 2002.

Data collected included key interviews with six referral staff and five specialty physicians from each of the four participating agencies between January and April 2005. The team also statistically analyzed the two hospital databases, examining payer mix and percentage change in cardiology and GI visits from 2000 to 2005.

Hartwig and the team say state policymakers should consider a variety of remedies like tax breaks, increased reimbursement rates, uncapped SAGA funding, restoring SAGA non-emergency medical transportation and expansion of the Husky program to new populations struggling with health care. The team recommended building stronger relationships between private-practice physicians, hospitals and federally qualified health centers (FQHCs), bringing specialists to FQHCs, and building formal community volunteer initiatives to care for the uninsured.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

University dedicates Malone Engineering Center

Biomedical engineering symposium also marked dedication

Celebrated language-learning program enters digital age

Coach is helping to steer city rowers to victory

Yale offers staff new incentives to car-pool

In Focus: Whitney Humanities Center

Tanner Lecture, related events focus on food and art of autobiography

Grant supports scientist's work related to nanomedicine

Scientists identify gene that plays a role in Tourette's Syndrome

Noted journalist Bob Woodward to deliver the Fryer Memorial Lecture

Show reveals 'journey' of reconstructive surgery patients

Career Fair to highlight jobs in federal government agencies

Troupe to present two nights of one-act operas

Novelist will read from his latest work of fiction

Exhibit traces roots of Tiananmen Square movement

Reparations for slavery to be among topics of conference

Talk, symposium examine how artists 'remade the past'

David Blight is speaker for library's next 'Books Sandwiched In'


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