Abstract

BackgroundThe Affordable Care Act (ACA) increased Medicaid coverage of Emergency General Surgery (EGS). We hypothesized that despite the ACA, racial and geographic disparities persisted for EGS admissions. MethodsThe Nationwide Inpatient Sample was queried from 2012 through Q3 of 2015 for Non-Medicare patient EGS admissions. Difference-in-Differences analyses (DID) compared payors, complications, mortality and costs in pre-ACA years (2012–2013) and post-ACA years (2014-2015Q3). ResultsEGS cases fell 9.1% from 1,711,940 to 1,555,033 NIS-weighted cases. Hispanics were still most likely to be uninsured but had improved coverage (OR 0.92, 95% CI: 0.88–0.96, p < 0.001). Risk of uninsured EGS admissions from the South region persisted (OR 1.52, 95% CI: 1.46–1.58, p < 0.001). Uninsured EGS patients had higher DID increased mortality than insured patients (0.31% higher, P = 0.003). Insured group DID costs increased more rapidly than in self-pay Patients (6.0% higher, P = 0.008) ConclusionsPost ACA, risk of uninsured EGS admissions remained highest in the South, in males, and Hispanics.

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