North Carolina's Medicaid Transformation: the Early Enrollee Experience
- PMID: 37488369
- PMCID: PMC10682315
- DOI: 10.1007/s11606-023-08319-9
North Carolina's Medicaid Transformation: the Early Enrollee Experience
Abstract
Introduction: On July 1, 2021, North Carolina's Medicaid Transformation mandatorily switched 1.6 million Medicaid beneficiaries from fee-for-service to managed care plans. We examined the early enrollee experience in terms of engagement in plan selection, provider continuity, use of primary care visits, and assistance with social needs.
Methods: Using electronic health records (EHR) covering pre- and post-transition periods (1/1/2019-5/31/2022) from the largest provider network in western North Carolina, we identified all children and adults under age 65 with continuous Medicaid or private coverage. We conducted primary surveys of a random sample of Medicaid-covered enrollees and obtained self-reported rates of engagement in plan selection, continuity of provider access, and receipt of social need assistance. We used comparative interrupted time series models to estimate the relative change in primary care visits associated with the transition.
Results: Our EHR-based study cohorts included 4859 Medicaid and 5137 privately insured enrollees, with 398 Medicaid enrollees in the primary surveys. We found that 77.3% of survey participants reported that the managed care plan they were on was not chosen but automatically assigned to them, 13.1% reported insufficient information about the transition, and 19.2% reported lacking assistance with plan choice. We found that 5.9% were assigned to a different primary care provider. Over 29% reported not receiving any additional social need assistance. The transition was associated with a 7.1% reduction (95% CI, -11.5 to -2.7%) in the volume of primary care visits among Medicaid enrollees relative to privately insured enrollees.
Conclusions: Medicaid enrollees in North Carolina may have had limited awareness and engagement in the transition process and experienced a reduction in primary care visits. As the state's transition process gains a foothold, future policy needs to improve enrollee engagement and develop evidence on healthcare utilization and patient outcomes.
Keywords: North Carolina; continuity of care; ethnicity; managed care; medicaid; race; transition.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.
Conflict of interest statement
None.
Figures
References
-
- North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. North Carolina’s Proposed Program Design for Medicaid Managed Care. 2017. Available at: https://files.nc.gov/dhhs/documents/files/MedicaidManagedCare_ProposedPr.... Accessed July 17, 2023.
-
- Donnelly-DeRoven C. Three months into Medicaid transformation, providers say the new administrative burdens are crushing. North Carolina Health News. 2022. Available at: https://www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/2021/10/19/three-months-into-med.... Accessed July 17, 2023.
-
- Kaiser Family Foundation. Medicaid Managed Care Tracker. 2022. Available at: https://www.kff.org/statedata/collection/medicaid-managed-care-tracker/. Accessed July 17, 2023.
-
- Sparer M. The Synthesis Project, Report No. 23. Medicaid managed care: Costs, access, and quality of care. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. 2012. Available at: https://www.cancercarediff.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/managed-care-r.... Assessed July 17, 2023.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials
