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Journal of women's health · Jun 2014
Preventive care for low-income women in massachusetts post-health reform.
- Cheryl R Clark, Jane Soukup, Heather Riden, Dora Tovar, Piper Orton, Elisabeth Burdick, Mary Ellen Capistran, Jennifer Morisset, Elizabeth E Browne, Garrett Fitzmaurice, and Paula A Johnson.
- 1 Division of General Medicine and Primary Care, Harvard Medical School , Boston, Massachusetts.
- J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2014 Jun 1; 23 (6): 493-8.
BackgroundBefore enacting health insurance reform in 2006, Massachusetts provided free breast, cervical cancer, and cardiovascular risk screening for low-income uninsured women through a federally subsidized program called the Women's Health Network (WHN). This article examines whether, as women transitioned to insurance to pay for screening tests after health reform legislation was passed, cancer and cardiovascular disease screening changed among WHN participants between 2004 and 2010.MethodsWe examined claims data from the Massachusetts health insurance exchange and chart review data to measure utilization of mammography, Pap smear, and blood pressure screening among WHN participants in five community health centers in greater Boston. We conducted a longitudinal analysis, by insurance type, using generalized estimating equations to examine the likelihood of screening at recommended intervals in the postreform period compared to the prereform period.ResultsPre- and postreform, we found a high prevalence of recommended mammography (86% vs. 88%), Pap smear (88% vs. 89%), and blood pressure screening (87% vs. 91%) that was similar or improved for most women postreform. Screening use differed by insurance type. Recommended mammography screening was statistically significantly increased among women with state-subsidized private insurance (odds ratio [OR] 1.58, p<0.05). Women with unsubsidized private insurance or Medicare had decreased Pap smear use postreform. Although screening prevalence was high, 31% of women required state safety-net funds to pay for screening tests.ConclusionOur results suggest a continued need for safety-net programs to support preventive screening among low-income women after implementation of healthcare reform.
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