Abstract

To determine the association between Medicaid expansion and infant mortality rate (IMR) in the United States. State-level aggregate data on US IMR, race, and sex were abstracted from the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention's Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research. The association between Medicaid expansion and IMR adjusted for race and sex was assessed with multiple linear regression models using difference-in-differences estimation and Huber-White robust standard errors. Difference-in-differences regression found no association between Medicaid expansion status and change in national IMR from 2010 to 2017 (Coef.=0.04; 95% CI: -0.39, 0.46). However, among Hispanics, the program was found to be associated with reduction in IMR (Diff-in-Diff Coef.=-0.53; 95% CI: -1.02, -0.03). Overall, the Affordable Care Act-induced Medicaid expansion was not associated with IMR reduction in expansion states relative to nonexpansion states. However, the program was associated with a significant IMR decline among Hispanics.

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