Publication: A Longitudinal Study of Medicaid Coverage for Tobacco Dependence Treatments in Massachusetts and Associated Decreases in Hospitalizations for Cardiovascular Disease
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Date
2010
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Public Library of Science
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Land, Thomas, Nancy A. Rigotti, Douglas E. Levy, Mark Paskowsky, Donna Warner, Jo-Ann Kwass, LeAnn Wetherell, and Lois Keithly. 2010. A longitudinal study of Medicaid coverage for tobacco dependence treatments in Massachusetts and associated decreases in hospitalizations for cardiovascular disease. PLoS Medicine 7(12): e1000375.
Research Data
Abstract
Background: Insurance coverage of tobacco cessation medications increases their use and reduces smoking prevalence in a
population. However, uncertainty about the impact of this coverage on health care utilization and costs is a barrier to the
broader adoption of this policy, especially by publicly funded state Medicaid insurance programs. Whether a publicly
funded tobacco cessation benefit leads to decreased medical claims for tobacco-related diseases has not been studied. We
examined the experience of Massachusetts, whose Medicaid program adopted comprehensive coverage of tobacco
cessation medications in July 2006. Over 75,000 Medicaid subscribers used the benefit in the first 2.5 years. On the basis of
earlier secondary survey work, it was estimated that smoking prevalence declined among subscribers by 10% during this
period.
Methods and Findings: Using claims data, we compared the probability of hospitalization prior to use of the tobacco
cessation pharmacotherapy benefit with the probability of hospitalization after benefit use among Massachusetts Medicaid
beneficiaries, adjusting for demographics, comorbidities, seasonality, influenza cases, and the implementation of the
statewide smoke-free air law using generalized estimating equations. Statistically significant annualized declines of 46%
(95% confidence interval 2%–70%) and 49% (95% confidence interval 6%–72%) were observed in hospital admissions for
acute myocardial infarction and other acute coronary heart disease diagnoses, respectively. There were no significant
decreases in hospitalizations rates for respiratory diagnoses or seven other diagnostic groups evaluated.
Conclusions: Among Massachusetts Medicaid subscribers, use of a comprehensive tobacco cessation pharmacotherapy
benefit was associated with a significant decrease in claims for hospitalizations for acute myocardial infarction and acute
coronary heart disease, but no significant change in hospital claims for other diagnoses. For low-income smokers, removing
the barriers to the use of smoking cessation pharmacotherapy has the potential to decrease short-term utilization of
hospital services.
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Keywords
cardiovascular disorders, myocardial infarction, public health and epidemiology, epidemiology, health policy, health services research and economics, preventive medicine, screening
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