Abstract
Commercial health plans establish networks and require much higher cost sharing for out-of-network (OON) care. Yet, the adequacy of health plan networks for access to pediatric specialists, especially for children with medical complexity, is largely unknown. To examine differences in OON care and associated cost-sharing payments for commercially insured children with different levels of medical complexity. Cross-sectional study using a nationwide commercial claims database. Enrollees 0-18 years old in employer-sponsored insurance plans. The Pediatric Medical Complexity Algorithm was used to classify individuals into 3 levels of medical complexity: children with no chronic disease, children with non-complex chronic diseases, and children with complex chronic diseases. OON care rates, cost-sharing payments for OON care and in-network care, OON cost sharing as a proportion of total health care spending, and OON cost sharing as a proportion of total cost sharing. The study sample included 6,399,006 individuals with no chronic disease, 1,674,450 with noncomplex chronic diseases, and 603,237 with complex chronic diseases. Children with noncomplex chronic diseases were more likely to encounter OON care by 6.77 percentage points with higher cost-sharing by $288 for OON care, relative to those with no chronic disease. For those with complex chronic diseases, these differences rose to 16.08 percentage points and $599, respectively. Among children who saw behavioral health providers, rates of OON care were especially high. Commercially insured children with medical complexity experience higher rates of OON care with higher OON cost-sharing payments compared with those with no chronic disease.
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