Abstract

BackgroundThe Affordable Care Act (ACA) created new payment rules that provided reimbursement for physicians to engage in advance care planning (ACP) conversations with patients. This reimbursement policy has the potential to increase ACP participation, including among racial and ethnic minority groups that have had lower ACP participation. ObjectivesTo examine whether the ACP payment rules were associated with an increase in use of do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders, particularly among racial and ethnic minority groups, among patients diagnosed with heart failure (HF) in California. MethodsThe California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) Patient Discharge Data Set was used to identify a cohort of elderly patients with a principal diagnosis of HF. This study included 432,520 hospital admissions of patients over the age of 65 with a primary diagnosis of HF between 2012 and 2018. DNR status was identified using International Classification of Diseases, Clinical Modification Ninth and Tenth Revision, codes. ResultsThere was a small increase in the utilization of DNR orders overall after the ACA reimbursement policy, but the change was not significantly different for all racial and ethnic groups when compared to white non-Hispanic patients. ConclusionsACP payment rules provided in the ACA were associated with increased utilization of DNR, but the effect was not significantly different for racial and ethnic minorities hospitalized with HF in CA. Additional efforts are needed to increase ACP participation among racial and ethnic minorities.

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