Providing greater access to health insurance led to a decline
in deaths, according to a new study of Massachusetts' health care
reform law.
Massachusetts passed comprehensive health care reform
in 2006, providing a model for the Affordable Care Act -- dubbed by some
as "Obamacare." In the
four years after the law took effect in Massachusetts, deaths from all
causes dropped nearly 3 percent compared with similar counties in states
without health reform, the study found.
Researchers estimate that
the Massachusetts law prevented 320 deaths a year. That works out to
one life saved for every 830 people who gained insurance.
The study, published in the May 6 issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine also noted a 4.5 percent decline in deaths from preventable and treatable conditions, such as cancer, infections and heart disease.
CDC: Up to 40 percent of deaths are preventable
Massachusetts differs in many ways from the nation as a whole.
But in a larger expansion of coverage, "there is a very real likelihood
that you're going to help people live longer," said Dr. Benjamin
Sommers, assistant professor of health policy and economics at Harvard
School of Public Health and the study's lead author.
Much like Obamacare, the Massachusetts health care reform law expanded Medicaid, subsidized private health plans and created an individual mandate
to hold people accountable for getting health coverage. The reforms
took effect in 2006 and 2007, several years before President Obama
signed the Affordable Care Act into law in 2010.
Using data from
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Sommers and
colleagues examined changes in death rates for adults, ages 20 to 64,
before and after the state enacted health reform, and compared them with
the experience in similar counties in states that had not enacted
health reform.
The largest gains in life occurred in counties with high poverty and higher rates of uninsured adults before health care reform.
"If
you think health reform is what's causing this change, that's the
pattern you should see, that the people who benefit the most are
lower-income and ... uninsured," Sommers said.
The study also
found that more people in Massachusetts had insurance after the law was
enacted. There were also fewer cost-related barriers to care, and more
people saw their doctors for preventive care, according to the study.
People also reported overall improvements in their health.
Glen
Mays, professor of health services and systems research at the
University of Kentucky in Lexington, said the study adds to a growing
body of evidence showing that health care reform improves people's
health.
"Interventions that can make a dent in overall death rates
in the space of just a few years are few and far between, and certainly
worthy of attention," Mays said.
But the drop in deaths in Massachusetts may not have been solely the result of expanded health insurance coverage
in the state, he said. Lower out-of-pocket costs for preventive care
and enhanced public health programs may have played a role, too.
A
previously published study showed large reductions in smoking
prevalence and tobacco-related health problems among people on Medicaid
after Massachusetts added a comprehensive tobacco cessation benefit to
the public health program as part of its health reform strategy, Mays
noted.
"You can't rule out the possibility that something else is
going on," agreed Christopher Conover, a research scholar at the Center
for Health Policy and Inequities Research at Duke University. "But I
think they've done as good a job as you can do with the data they've got
in nailing it down and tying it to insurance coverage as the causal
explanation."
"The conclusion that coverage expansion leads to
health benefits by facilitating access is eminently reasonable," Austin
Frakt, a health economist at the Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare
System, writes in an accompanying editorial in the same issue of the
journal.
But at what cost to society? The study does not examine
whether health reforms that save one life per 830 people are cost
effective.
Based on the study, Conover offered his own rough
calculation, suggesting that saving one life costs upwards of $272,000
per "quality-adjusted year of life," a measure that refers to the
quality and quantity gained as a result of the health reforms.
"Is that a good way of spending valuable taxpayer dollars? I think that's a legitimate question to be asking," Conover said.
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