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Use Of High- And Low-Value Health Care Among US Adults, By Income, 2010–19

Sungchul Park, Rishi K. Wadhera

2024Health Affairs13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Health care payment reforms in the US have aimed to encourage the use of high-value care while discouraging the use of low-value care. However, little is known about whether the use of high- and low-value care differs by income level. Using data from the 2010-19 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, we examined the use of specified types of high- and low-value care by income level. We found that high-income adults were significantly more likely than low-income adults to use nearly all types of high-value care. Findings were consistent across age categories, although differences by income level in the use of high-value care were smaller among the elderly. Our analysis of differences in the use of low-value care had mixed results. Among nonelderly adults, significant differences between those with high and low incomes were found for five of nine low-value services, and among elderly adults, significant differences by income level were found for three of twelve low-value services. Understanding the mechanisms underlying these disparities is crucial to developing effective policies and interventions to ensure equitable access to high-value care and discourage low-value services for all patients, regardless of income.

Topics & Concepts

Value (mathematics)BusinessLow incomeHealth careDemographic economicsActuarial scienceEconomicsEconomic growthComputer scienceMachine learningHealthcare cost, quality, practicesHealth Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of LifeHealthcare Policy and Management
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