Medicaid Managed Care and Racial Differences in Satisfaction and Access (original) (raw)

Journal of Health Care for The Poor and Underserved, 2003

Abstract

Many researchers have suggested that the implementation of managed care may lower access to, and quality of, health care services for minorities. However, very little empirical data examining this issue exists. To examine it, the authors used a study design that was both cross-sectional and longitudinal in that they surveyed Medicaid recipients in two counties at two points in time; one of the counties began delivering services through managed care between the two survey periods. Their results indicate that, overall, managed care had neither a positive nor a negative effect on African Americans' access to health care services in either absolute terms or relative to whites'. In addition, race was not found to be associated with satisfaction. However, a Medicaid recipient's race was found to negatively affect his or her access to service under both managed care and fee-for-service systems.

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