realizing the vision of health equity in the affordable care act: assessing progress & building...
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Realizing the Vision of Health Equity in the Affordable Care Act:
Assessing Progress & Building Opportunities for the Future
Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPHSenior Research Scientist, Texas Health InstituteAssociate Professor, UT School of Public Health
&Nadia J. Siddiqui, MPH
Senior Health Policy Analyst, Texas Health Institute
141st Annual APHA Meeting, November 4, 2013, Boston, MA
Project Support: WK Kellogg Foundation, The California Endowment, & Kaiser Permanente
ACA & Racial and Ethnic Health Equity Series
5 Reports, Nearly 60 Provisions on Advancing Equity
Report 1: Health
Insurance
Marketplace
- Culturally & linguistically appropriate marketing,
outreach, and education
- Non-discrimination
- Special provisions for
American Indians
Report 2:Health Care
Safety Net
- Medicaid- CHIP
- Health Centers- DSH
Payments- Community Health Needs Assessment
Report 3:Health Care
Workforce
- Primary Care- Underserved
Areas- Workforce
Diversity- Cultural
Competence- National Healthcare Workforce
Commission
Report 4: Public
Health & Preventi
on
- Prevention & Public Health
Fund - CTGs
- Obesity- Cancer
- Diabetes- Oral Health- American
Indian Health
Report 5: Research
, Quality & Innovatio
n
- National Quality
Strategy- PCORI
- NIH/NIMHD- CMS
Innovation- ACOs
- Medical Homes
- Agency OMHs
- Race/Ethnicity
Data Standards
ACA’s Overall Progress on Advancing Equity
More Fully funded or
Implemented
Partially Funded or
ImplementedNot Funded or Implemented
Health Insurance Marketplace 7 0 1 8
Safety Net 3 3 1 7
Workforce Diversity 7 6 6 19
Data, Research, Quality 4 3 4 11
Public Health & Prevention 6 4 1 11
Total 27(48%)
16 (29%)
13(23%) 56
ACA Status & Implications for Advancing Health
Equity as we Approach 2014
Health Insurance MarketplacesProjected Enrollees by Race & Ethnicity
58%11%
25%
6%White
Black or African American
Hispanic or Latino
Other
42% or over 12 million Non-Whites25% will speak a language other than English at home
Source: KFF. A Profile of Health Insurance Exchange Enrollees, March 2011.
How Are Marketplaces Addressing Disparities?
Source: Andrulis DP, Jahnke LR, Siddiqui NJ, and Cooper MR. Implementing Cultural and Linguistic Requirements in Health Insurance Exchanges, 2013. Texas Health Institute: Austin, TX. Available at: http://www.texashealthinstitute.org/health-care-reform.html
Medicaid Expansion: Projected Eligible by Race and Ethnicity
White Hispanic or Latino African American Other
54.9%
19.4% 18.7%
7.0%
Percent of Population with Income below 138% FPL who will be Eligible for Medicaid in 2014, by Race and Ethnicity
*Source: Kenney, G.M., Zuckerman, S., Dubay, L., Huntress, M., Lynch, V., Haley, J., & Anderson. (2012). Not Opting in to the Medicaid Expansion under the ACA: Who are the Uninsured Adults Who Could Gain Health Insurance Coverage? Timely Analysis of Immediate Health Policy Issues. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Urban Institute.**Data extrapolated from Kenney et al., 2012.
• 6.8 million or 45% of New Medicaid Eligible are Non-White.*
• In 29 States Moving toward Expansion, 3.8 million Non-Whites.**
ACA Capacity Initiatives to Meet New Demand
Enhancing Capacity
Primary Care Workforce Support
Minority Health
Professions(HBCUs)
Enhance Capacity in
Underserved Areas (NHSC)
Health Center Support
(FQHCs, NMHC,School &
Teaching Health Centers)
Payment & Delivery
Innovations(ACOs, PCMHs,
1115 Waivers)
Access to Care in the Safety Net
Challenges to Advancing Health Equity through the
ACA
1. Funding & Sustainability
• More than half of the provisions received substantially less than authorized or no funding from the ACA.
• Declining support for minority health and health professions.– HCOP & COE programs– HHS’ minority health initiatives
• Uncertain support for sustaining public health & prevention initiatives.
concerns.
2. Political Antipathy
Antipathy toward the law may thwart progress to advance equity in many states.
• Antagonism to Marketplace• In states not expanding Medicaid…
– 2 million, low-income diverse individuals will fall through cracks
– 60% of uninsured African Americans in states not expanding
– 44% of uninsured Hispanics in states not expanding
• Undocumented immigrants left at margins• Misinformation, and confused & reluctant
consumers generally; for some, language barriers.
Billboard on 42nd St. Near Times Square
3. Time
• ACA’s broader provisions are priority,but will equity issues be integrated?– Health insurance marketplaces– Medicaid expansion
• Measurable outcomes in short run (2-3 years)– Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute– CMS Innovation Center
• Cultivating partnerships and collaborations takes time not available under many ACA provisions.
4. Equity is Not a Priority
• Implementing ACA’s insurance provisions takes center stage, likely to limit attention to equity and diversity.
• Many minority health & underrepresented minority health professions provisions with declining support.
• Cultural competence is not a priority – almost no support!
• How to reframe equity in context of mainstream priorities?
2014 & Beyond:Actions and
Opportunities for Advancing Equity
• “Window of Opportunity” to advance equity given support & attention to marketplaces.
• Equity must be integrated early on & be ongoing:– Leadership & governance– Navigator & assister recruitment & training– Outreach & enrollment– Language services and assistance– Community engagement– Measurement & evaluation
1. Monitoring & Adapting Marketplace Implementation to Advance Equity
Variation in Marketplaces & Implications for Equity
• Most Progressive, with both Medicaid expansion and state-run Marketplace.
• Somewhat Progressive, with Medicaid expansion and/or state-run or partnership Marketplace, in challenging political environment.
• Least Progressive, opposed to the ACA with federal Marketplace and/or no Medicaid expansion.
• Assisting in transitioning the safety net– Infrastructure support for delivery & payment reform– Actions to support care for remaining uninsured– Monitoring & reassessing DSH payment reductions– Tracking 1115 waiver innovation and potential models
• Supplementing existing workforce support– Supply of providers in underserved & diverse areas– Minority-serving institutions & HBCUs– Health professions programs for under-represented
minorities– Cultural competency education & training
2. Addressing Gaps in Access & Capacity to Meet Needs of a Growing Diverse Patient Population
• Offers opportunity to break new ground in bringing communities more directly into health and health care programs.
• Offers direct role for philanthropy and private sector to leverage and expand, sustain, and evaluate community efforts.
3. Building on ACA’s Community-Based Initiatives to Engage and Reach Diverse Communities
• Monitoring ACA programs for impact, outcomes, and effectiveness by race & ethnicity– Marketplace implementation– Enrollment in exchanges & Medicaid– Navigator & assister programs– DSH payment reduction impacts
• Texas Health Institute to develop Report Card on Implementation Progress of Marketplace Initiatives for Advancing Racial & Ethnic Equity
4. Advancing Metrics, Measuring, & Monitoring
• Community forums to educate audiences on the ACA & opportunities to bridge disparities.
• State and local forums on “how to” effectively integrate diversity and equity into various ACA-supported activities.
• Continued advocacy around key disparities priorities:– Oral health disparities – Cultural competency education– Minority health professions programs
5. Education & Advocacy for Advancing Equity
Closing Remarks
• Many provisions in place to advance equity.
• BUT time, dollars, launch challenges, misinformation, and active and passive resistance to the law threaten to deflect resources and delay or diminish the law’s equity vision and potential.
• Need for active advocacy and efforts to keep equity high on the health care reform agenda and across priorities reflected in the ACA.
Our Health Care Reform & Equity Team
Dennis P. Andrulis, PhD, MPHSenior Research Scientist, Texas Health Institute
Associate Professor, University of Texas School of Public Health
Nadia J. Siddiqui, MPHSenior Health Policy Analyst, Texas Health Institute
Maria R. Cooper, MAHealth Policy Analyst, Texas Health Institute
Lauren Jahnke, MPAffConsultant, LRJ Research & Consulting
For questions, feedback, or to be added to our mailing list, please e-mail: nsiddiqui@texashealthinstitute.org.
Website: http://www.texashealthinstitute.org/health-care-reform.html
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