학술논문

Does State Medicaid Coverage of Smoking Cessation Treatments Affect Quitting?
Document Type
article
Source
Health Services Research. 53(6)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Behavioral and Social Science
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Tobacco
Prevention
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Substance Misuse
Clinical Research
Good Health and Well Being
Counseling
Health Behavior
Health Services Accessibility
Health Surveys
Humans
Insurance Coverage
Medicaid
Poverty
Smoking Cessation
Tobacco Use Cessation
Tobacco Use Disorder
United States
Smoking
tobacco-dependence treatments
state health policies
Public Health and Health Services
Policy and Administration
Health Policy & Services
Health services and systems
Policy and administration
Language
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:Cigarette smoking and smoking-related diseases disproportionately affect low-income populations. Health insurance coverage of smoking cessation treatments is increasingly used to encourage quitting. We assess the relationship between state Medicaid coverage of smoking cessation treatments and past-year quitting in adult Medicaid beneficiaries. DATA SOURCES:2009-2014 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS); 2008-2013 indicators of state Medicaid coverage of smoking cessation treatments. STUDY DESIGN:A triple-differencing specification based on differences in Medicaid cessation coverage policies across states as well as within-state differences between Medicaid beneficiaries and a counterfactual group of low-income adults not covered by Medicaid. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS:Individual-level NHIS data with restricted geographical identifiers were merged with state-year Medicaid coverage indicators. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Combined coverage of both cessation counseling and medications in state Medicaid programs was associated with increased quitting, with an estimated mean increase in past-year quitting of 3.0 percentage points in covered Medicaid beneficiaries relative to persons without coverage. CONCLUSIONS:Combined coverage of both smoking cessation counseling and medication by state Medicaid programs could help reduce cigarette smoking among Medicaid beneficiaries.