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Integration on the frontlines of Medicaid accountable care organizations and associations with perceived care quality, health equity, and satisfaction

Kerrissey M, Jamakandi S, Alcusky M, Himmelstein J, Rosenthal M
Med Care Res Rev

Amid enthusiasm about accountable care organizations (ACOs) in Medicaid, little is known about the primary care practices engaging in them. We leverage a survey of administrators within a random sample (stratified by ACO) of 225 practices joining Massachusetts Medicaid ACOs (64% response rate; 225 responses). We measure the integration of processes with distinct entities: consulting clinicians, eye specialists for diabetes care, mental/behavioral care providers, and long-term and social services agencies. Using multivariable regression, we examine organizational correlates of integration and assess integration's relationships with care quality improvement, health equity, and satisfaction with the ACO. Integration varied across practices. Clinical integration was positively associated with perceived care quality improvement; social service integration was positively associated with addressing equity; and mental/behavioral and long-term service integration were positively associated with ACO satisfaction (all p < .05). Understanding differences in integration at the practice level is vital for sharpening policy, setting expectations, and supporting improvement in Medicaid ACOs.

Kerrissey M, Jamakandi S, Alcusky M, Himmelstein J, Rosenthal M. Integration on the frontlines of medicaid accountable care organizations and associations with perceived care quality, health equity, and satisfaction. Med Care Res Rev. 2023;0(0). Epub ahead of print. DOI:10.1177/10775587231173474. PMID: 37232171

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Provider Experience of Care
Population
Medicaid-insured
Social Determinant of Health
Not Specified
Study design
Other Study Design
Keywords