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Rural
Rehabilitation Research
Progress Report #23:
Living
Well and Medicaid:
Better Health for Consumers,
Lower Costs for States
Research
and Training Center on Disability in Rural Communities,
The University of
Montana Rural Institute July 2004
The United States has the world's most expensive
healthcare system. In 2002, health spending
rose to nearly 15 percent of U.S. Gross Domestic Product. Healthcare
policymakers charged with balancing cost containment with quality healthcare for
consumers are desperate for solutions (Levit, Smith, Cowan, Sensenig, and Catlin,
2004).
Background: Across the U.S. as Medicaid enrollments
rise, states struggle with the increasing drain on their budgets; 45 states have
now instituted measures to control growth in Medicaid spending (Kaiser
Commission on Medicaid and the Underserved, 2002). From 1995 to 1999, Medicaid
spending rose by 6.5 percent per year. In 2001 it increased by 10.2 percent, and
in 2002 by 11.7 percent. Clearly, states desperately need solutions.
Medicaid is an entitlement program, but each state determines who is eligible
based on income and characteristics (people with disabilities, families with
children, etc.). In 1980, 33.6% of Medicaid spending went for beneficiaries with
disabilities. By 2000, the 17.6% of Medicaid beneficiaries with disabilities
accounted for 45.1% of Medicaid spending (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, 2004). In just 20 years, the share of Medicaid spending for people
with disabilities grew by 11.5%. Part of this may be attributable to their
increased risk for secondary conditions, including expensive medical
complications such as pressure ulcers and heart disease (Coyle, Santiago, Shank,
Ma, & Boyd, 2000; Seekins, Clay & Ravesloot, 1994).
As part of a national health promotion movement for all people with disability,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) support our program of
research, development, and services. Researchers at The University of Montana
RTC: Rural and at the University of Kansas RTC/IL have developed and evaluated
the Living Well with a Disability program, a health promotion program for
adults with physical disabilities.
Based on independent living philosophy and rural traditions of self-care,
Living Well is an eight-week workshop which introduces a goal-setting and
goal clarification process, and teaches problem-solving skills. Living Well
also provides tools for managing health and making healthy lifestyle changes,
increasing physical activity, developing and maintaining healthy relationships,
improving nutrition, avoiding depression and frustration, and advocating for
community changes that help maintain gains. Living Well improves
participants' health and reduces medical care costs over 12 months (Research
Progress Reports #6 and #7).
The goal of this current research was to examine the effects of the Living
Well with a Disability program on the cost of providing healthcare to
Medicaid beneficiaries.
Research Process: Nine centers for independent
living in eight states recruited a convenience sample of 122 adult Medicaid
recipients with mobility impairments to attend a two-hour Living Well
session each week for eight weeks. Of the recruits, 103 completed a pre-measure
and at least one post-measure and 78 completed pre-, post-, 2-, and 4-month
follow-up surveys. Our previous research included a 12-month follow-up survey,
but the current study's sample was too small for a 12-month analysis. We used a
staggered baseline experimental design with random assignment to treatment start
date. We also used an extended baseline measure collected two months before the
intervention to assess the study's internal validity.
Respondents used the Secondary Condition Surveillance Instrument
(Seekins, Clay, McCleary & Walsh, 1990) to rate the severity of limitation they
experienced from each of 43 secondary conditions. To estimate respondents'
healthcare costs, we used a 2-month retrospective recall of their physician and
emergency room visits, outpatient surgeries and hospital days. We multiplied
these utilization data by unit Medicare cost estimates to generate medical costs
which were depreciated by 30% to estimate Medicaid costs.
Results: Participants reported striking reductions
in their limitation from secondary conditions over the intervention period.
These were maintained at the two- and four-month follow-up (Figure 1), and were
consistent with previous reports on the effectiveness of the Living Well with
a Disability program. Participants' average secondary condition ratings
decreased by 25% between the pre- and the 4-month post-measure. Analysis of the
extended baseline data supported the internal validity. No evident change over
the baseline period was followed by substantial and statistically significant
change during the intervention period.

Figure 1. Description of Figure 1
Secondary Condition Severity Rating
Healthcare cost outcomes were very positively skewed,
precluding the use of parametric statistics. Table 1 includes quartiles and mean
for per person healthcare costs at pre-, post-, 2-month and 4-month post
period. The Friedman non-parametric repeated measures test was not significant (
2 3 = 3.71, p = .29), indicating that the change over time was no different than
that expected by chance.
In order to increase the sample size and statistical power of the significance
test, we also conducted the Wilcoxon paired samples test for the pre- and
post-test. This indicated statistically significant change (Wilcoxon Z = 2.82, p
= .005) in healthcare costs over the pre- to post-intervention period.
Table 1: Per-Person Healthcare Cost Quartiles for Each Measurement Period Description of Table 1
| Measurement Period |
Average Costs |
Cost at Each Percentile | ||
| 25th | 50th (Median) | 75th | ||
| Pre-intervention | $1778.10 | $0 | $190.50 | $569.50 |
| Post-intervention | $657.60 | $0 | $119.00 | $360.75 |
| 2-month post | $518.80 | $0 | $130.00 | $441.75 |
| 4-month post | $735.10 | $0 | $89.50 | $434.00 |
Next, we calculated the potential
net benefit to Medicaid of implementing the Living Well program. The
intervention cost $596 per participant, including program implementation and
expenses of training facilitators for 2 1/2 days in Kansas City, Missouri. Using
the mean per-person healthcare cost for each measurement period, we calculated
that the net saving to Medicaid would be $2,828 per person over the six months
from program implementation through four-month post follow-up. After accounting
for Living Well implementation costs for 103 participants, this
intervention saved the Medicaid program as much as $291,284 (in 1998 dollars).
Limitations: These estimates may change
substantially with other samples. This study was limited by:
Conclusions and Next
Steps: States are in crisis as more people with disabilities come to
depend upon Medicaid services. To meet their needs, Medicaid must consider
alternative perspectives and new paradigms. This study is consistent with other
research in demonstrating that the health promotion paradigm for people with
chronic illness and disabilities is effective (e.g. Lorig et al., Chronic
Disease Study). It is possible to improve the quality of an individual's
life while controlling healthcare costs. Individuals with disabilities report
they are limited by an average of 14 secondary conditions annually. In this
study, secondary conditions decreased by 25% during the intervention period and
the decrease was maintained for 4 months after the intervention. In a larger
study, this decrease was maintained over 12 months and healthcare costs during
the intervention period were reduced by 37% (Research
Progress Report #7).
Living Well with a Disability represents two notable paradigm shifts.
First, it uses the World Health Organization's social model of disability (International
Classification of Function, 2001). This model recognizes that disability
outcome is the result of how a person's functional abilities interact with the
environment in which the person lives. Second, Living Well is consistent
with Independent Living philosophy's emphasis on consumer choice and
empowerment. Living Well encourages participants to improve their health as a
way to pursue meaningful goals, such as employment and relationships.
If the status quo
dictates future Medicaid policy for people with disabilities,
we can predict disaster for individuals and state governments.
The solution is large scale demonstration programs that can validate and build on the success of programs such as Living Well with a Disability.
Resources and
References:
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (2004). 2004 Chartbook.
www.cms.hhs.gov/charts/medicaid/InfoMedicaid_schip.pdf
Coyle, C. P., Santiago, M. C., Shank, J. W., Ma, G. X., & Boyd, R. (2000).
Secondary conditions and women with physical disabilities: A descriptive study.
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 81, 1380-1387.
Levit, K. Smith, C. Cowan, C. Sensenig, A., & Catlin, A. (2004). Trends: Health
spending rebound continues in 2002; Once again, hospital spending drives total
health spending upward. Health Affairs, 23 (1).
Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured. (2002). Medicaid Spending
Growth: Results from a 2002 Survey. Washington: Kaiser Commission.
Ravesloot, C., Ipsen, C., & Seekins, T. (2001). Living
Well Could Save $31 Million Annually: Rural Disability and Rehabilitation
Preliminary Research Progress Report #7. Missoula: The University of Montana
Rural Institute.
Ravesloot, C., Seekins, T., & Ipsen, C. (1999).
Cost Effectiveness of Living Well with a Disability: Preliminary Research
Progress Report #6. Missoula: The University of Montana Rural Institute.
Seekins, T., Smith, N., McCleary, T., & Walsh, J. (1990). Secondary disability
prevention: Involving consumers in the development of policy and program
options. Journal of Disability Policy Studies, 1, 21-35.
Seekins, T., Clay, J. A., & Ravesloot, C. (1994). A descriptive study of
secondary conditions reported by a population of adults with physical
disabilities served by three independent living centers in a rural state.
Journal of Rehabilitation, 60, 47-51.
For more information, contact:
Craig Ravesloot,
Director of Health Projects
(303) 774-6196
cravesloot@comcast.net
Research and Training Center on Disability
in Rural Communities,
The University of Montana Rural Institute: A Center of
Excellence in Disability Education,
Research and Services, 52 Corbin Hall, Missoula, MT 59812-7056
(888) 268-2743 Toll-free; (406) 243-4200 TTY; (406) 243-2349 Fax
http://mtdh.ruralinstitute.umt.edu
| http://rtc.ruralinstitute.umt.edu
|
http://www.livingwellweb.com
This research was supported by Cooperative Agreement #R04CCR914204 from Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. The contents of this report are solely the
responsibility of the author and do not necessarily represent the official views
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

This report was prepared by Craig Ravesloot, copyright RTC: Rural, 2004. It is
also available in standard print, large print, Braille, and as a text-only
file.
Montana Disability &
Health Home Page |
RTC: Rural |
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| University of Montana
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