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Study finds widespread care disparities in
Medi-Cal program
In the first external analysis of the California
Department of Health Service's Medi-Cal
Managed Care program, researchers from the
UCLA Department of Family Medicine found
widespread health care disparities based on
ethnicity, race and language throughout the
system.
And African Americans are bearing the brunt of
it.
These disparities can lead to a lower quality of
care for the state's minority populations,
resulting in poorer health for these groups,
as well as higher health care and social
costs. The UCLA researchers make a series of
recommendations aimed at correcting these
disparities.
The study findings were presented March 27 during
a health policy briefing in Sacramento aimed
at informing legislative staff and academics
about the challenges facing Medi-Cal. The
University of California's California
Program on Access to Care, which funded the
study, sponsored the briefing.
"Medicaid is the largest provider of health care
services to low-income ethnic minority
populations in our nation," said Dr. Michael
Rodriguez, associate professor of family
medicine at the David Geffen School of
Medicine at UCLA and co-director of the
Network for Multicultural Research on Health
and Healthcare.
"Therefore, it is in Medicaid's best interest to
reduce health care disparities in order to
promote good health, reduce preventable
medical complications and reduce health care
costs."
The researchers examined 2006 data from eight
health plans that contract with California's
Medi-Cal Managed Care Division (MMCD)
Blue Cross of California, Central Coast
Alliance for Health, Contra Costa Health
Plan, Health Net, Inland Empire Health Plan,
Kern Health Systems, LA Care and San
Francisco Health Plan.
The eight plans together serve about 70 percent
of MMCD beneficiaries.
Among MMCD enrollees, 55.2 percent are
Hispanic, 16.6 percent are non-Hispanic
white, 13.1 percent are
black/African-American and 11.7 percent are
Asian/Pacific Islander.
Primary languages spoken among enrollees are
English, Spanish, Southeast Asian languages
such as Cambodian and Thai, and others, such
as Farsi, Polish and American Sign Language.
Researchers analyzed 16 care areas within three
broad categories: child and adolescent
health care, women's health care, and
chronic and other diseases.
They found that quality of care was significantly
lower in 10 of 16 areas for African
Americans, compared with other groups.
Additionally, care quality was lower for
non-Hispanic whites in 3 of 16 measures, and
most surprisingly English speakers
received lower quality of care than
non-English speakers in 13 of 16 measures,
possibly due in part to efforts by MMCD to
improve services for those with limited
English-language skills.
-
Specific findings included the following:
62 percent of African American children
received all six recommended childhood
vaccinations, compared with 67 percent
of non-Hispanic whites, 78 percent of
Hispanics and 82 percent of
Asians/Pacific Islanders.
-
43 percent of African American women received
breast cancer screenings, compared with
49 percent of non-Hispanic whites, 55
percent of Hispanics and 56 percent of
Asians/Pacific Islanders.
-
At 66 percent, African Americans with diabetes
have the lowest rate of hemoglobin AIc
testing, compared with 71 percent for
non-Hispanic whites, 75 percent for
Hispanics and 76 percent for
Asians/Pacific Islanders.
-
Among the researchers' policy recommendations
are:
Standardize ethnicity, race and
primary-language questions in the Medi-Cal
applications.
-
Implement a method to validate ethnic,
racial and primary-language data after
it has been collected.
-
Develop networks to electronically update
ethnicity, race and language data to
county welfare records.
-
Require health plans to incorporate a reduction
in these disparities into their
quality-improvement projects.
-
Research the reasons behind these
disparities.
The UCLA Department of Family Medicine provides
comprehensive primary care to entire
families, from newborns to seniors.
Its services include low-risk obstetrical care
and prenatal and inpatient care at Santa
Monica?UCLA Medical Center and Orthopedic
Hospital and outpatient care at the Les
Kelley Family Health Center in Santa Monica
and the Mid-Valley Family Health Center in
Van Nuys, Calif.
The department is also a leader in family
medicine education, for both medical
students and residents, and houses a
significant research unit focusing on
geriatric issues and health care disparities
among immigrant families and minority
communities in Los Angeles and C
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