Trends in
Racial, Ethnic, Sex, and Rural-Urban Inequities in Health Care in
Medicare Advantage: 2009-2018
The
CMS Office of Minority Health has published a new report, Trends in Racial, Ethnic, Sex, and Rural-Urban
Inequities in Health Care in Medicare Advantage: 2009-2018.
Since
2015, CMS OMH has published annual reports to highlight inequities in
the quality of care delivered to Medicare beneficiaries nationwide
based. Until now, these annual reports have focused on
comparisons within a single year. An investigation of historical trends
can provide important perspective on inequities. This report presents
an analysis of historical trends in inequities by race, ethnicity, sex,
and geography among Medicare beneficiaries enrolled in Medicare
Advantage (MA) plans nationwide.
This
report reveals the extent to which there has been progress in reducing
or eliminating initial inequities in those areas. Focusing on a set of
patient experience and clinical care measures that are comparable
across a 10-year period, the report describes inequities that existed
in 2009, how those inequities changed over the 10-year period, how
scores for each beneficiary group changed over time, and what
inequities remained in 2018.
In
all, this report provides data regarding four patient experience
measures and seven clinical care measures. Patient experience data were
collected via an annual national survey of Medicare beneficiaries,
known as the Medicare Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems (CAHPS®) survey from 2009 to 2018. Clinical care data were
gathered through medical records and insurance claims or encounter data
for hospitalizations, medical office visits, and procedures as part of
the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS®).
The
findings of the report detail reductions in inequities for specific
populations across different measures, including several substantial
reductions in inequities and improvements in care. While these results
are encouraging, further investigation is needed to understand the
reason for the large improvements in care that occurred for Black and
Hispanic beneficiaries and for rural residents, since lessons learned
from such an investigation could potentially be applied to ensure
continued progress toward greater health care equity for all
beneficiaries. Review the full results in the report.
To
learn more about the CMS Office of Minority Health, visit https://go.cms.gov/omh or subscribe to the Minority Health
listserv.
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