Analysis of Longitudinal Claims Databases (R1 Part B): Effect of Variation in Health Coverage, Employment, and Community Resources on Adverse Events and Healthcare Costs and Utilization, United States (ICPSR 38531)

Version Date: Aug 26, 2022 View help for published

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Elham Mahmoudi, University of Michigan. Department of Family Medicine; Mark D. Peterson, University of Michigan. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

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  • V2 [2024-06-24]
  • V1 [2022-08-26] unpublished

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The Analysis of Longitudinal Claims Databases (R1 Part B): Effect of Variation in Health Coverage, Employment, and Community Resources on Adverse Events and Healthcare Costs and Utilization, United States is the second of a three-part project that examined claims data from Medicare, Medicaid, and/or Optum databases to explore aging trajectories, use of preventative services, and healthcare outcomes for individuals with several types of physical disabilities.

This study made use of existing national databases to examine various health outcomes among individuals with disability. Using 2007-2016 Medicaid and Medicare Data, the researchers conducted three separate types of analyses:

  1. At the state level, examine the effect of variation in health coverage and related health policies on adverse health events and health outcomes among youth and adults with disability.
  2. At the county level, examine the variation in employment and community participatory living on adverse health and health outcomes among youth and adult with disability.
  3. At the state level, examine the effect of variation in Medicaid long-term care and community centers on health outcomes among youth and adult with disability.

United States Department of Health and Human Services. Administration for Community Living. National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (90RTHF0001)
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2022-08-26

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