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Medicaid expansion and opioid overdose mortality among socioeconomically disadvantaged populations in the US: A difference in differences analysis

Opioid-related overdoses are a major cause of mortality in the US. Medicaid Expansion is posited to reduce opioid overdose-related mortality (OORM), and may have a particularly strong effect among people of lower socioeconomic status. This study assessed the association between state Medicaid Expans...

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Published in:Drug and alcohol dependence 2022-04, Vol.233, p.109381-109381, Article 109381
Main Authors: Ibragimov, Umedjon, Mansfield, Russell W., Yarbrough, Courtney R., Cummings, Janet R., Livingston, Melvin D., Haardörfer, Regine, Beane, Stephanie, Fadanelli, Monica M., Haley, Danielle F., Cooper, Hannah L.F.
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container_title Drug and alcohol dependence
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creator Ibragimov, Umedjon
Mansfield, Russell W.
Yarbrough, Courtney R.
Cummings, Janet R.
Livingston, Melvin D.
Haardörfer, Regine
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Fadanelli, Monica M.
Haley, Danielle F.
Cooper, Hannah L.F.
description Opioid-related overdoses are a major cause of mortality in the US. Medicaid Expansion is posited to reduce opioid overdose-related mortality (OORM), and may have a particularly strong effect among people of lower socioeconomic status. This study assessed the association between state Medicaid Expansion and county-level OORM rates among individuals with low educational attainment. This quasi-experimental study used lagged multilevel difference-in-difference models to test the relationship of state Medicaid Expansion to county-level OORM rates among people with a high-school diploma or less. Longitudinal (2008–2018) OORM data on 2978 counties nested in 48 states and the District of Columbia (DC) were drawn from the National Center for Health Statistics. The state-level exposure was a time-varying binary-coded variable capturing pre- and post-Medicaid Expansion under the Affordable Care Act (an “on switch”-type variable). The main outcome was annual county-level OORM rates among low-education adults adjusted for potential underreporting of OORM. The adjusted county-level OORM rates per 100,000 among the study population rose on average from 10.26 (SD = 13.56) in 2008–14.51 (SD = 18.20) in 2018. In the 1-year lagged multivariable model that controlled for policy and sociodemographic covariates, the association between state Medicaid Expansion and county-level OORM rates was statistically insignificant. We found no evidence that expanding Medicaid eligibility reduced OORM rates among adults with lower educational attainment. Future work should seek to corroborate our findings and also identify – and repair – breakdowns in mechanisms that should link Medicaid Expansion to reduced overdoses. •Compared opioid deaths among less educated people by state’s Medicaid expansion.•States that expanded Medicaid had higher adjusted rates of opioid deaths.•No evidence that Medicaid expansion influences opioid death rates in less educated.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109381
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ispartof Drug and alcohol dependence, 2022-04, Vol.233, p.109381-109381, Article 109381
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult
Adults
Analgesics, Opioid - therapeutic use
At risk populations
Averages
Difference-in-difference modeling
Disadvantaged
Drug overdose
Education
Educational attainment
Government programs
Humans
Medicaid
Medicaid expansion
Mortality
Multivariable control
Narcotics
Opiate Overdose
Opioid epidemic
Opioid overdose-related mortality rates
Opioids
Overdose
Overdoses
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
Population studies
Quasi-experimental methods
Sociodemographics
Socioeconomic status
Socioeconomics
Statistical analysis
Underreporting
United States - epidemiology
Vulnerable Populations
title Medicaid expansion and opioid overdose mortality among socioeconomically disadvantaged populations in the US: A difference in differences analysis
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