Study Examines ACA‘s Impact on Young Adult Substance โคUse-Related Emergency Care
A recent study published in The American Journal of Managed Care โฃ investigated whether the โคaffordable Care Act’sโข (ACA) dependent coverage expansion – allowing young adults to remain on their parents’ insuranceโ plans until age 26โ – impacted emergency department (ED) visits โand hospital admissions related to substance use. Led by Refat Rasul Srejon, MPH, a Doctor of Public Health candidate at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, the research focused on individuals aged 22-26, a demographic particularly vulnerable to substance misuse and targeted by theโ ACA expansion.
The โstudy โคutilized a quasi-experimental design, analyzing data from theโ Nationwide Emergency Department Sample โค(NEDS) spanning 2007-2019. Researchers compared trends in ED visits and inpatient admissions for a “treatment group” ofโ individuals aged 23-25 (directly affected by the ACA policy) with a “comparison group” โof those aged 27-29 (assumed to be unaffected).โ โ Statistical adjustments were made to account for factors suchโค asโข sex, โpre-existing healthโ conditions, insurance type, neighborhood income, rural location, and hospital region.
Findings revealed a notableโค difference inโ outcomes based โคon the โขsubstance involved. The study demonstrated a decline in alcohol-associated ED visits within the treatment group following the ACA implementation, suggesting โthat increased insurance coverage may have contributed โขto reduced emergency care for alcohol-related issues.However, opioid-associated โED visits increased and this increase was consistent across both age groups studied. Furthermore, the research found no meaningful change in โคinpatient admission rates related to substance use between the two age groups.
Srejon and his team interpret these contrasting results as evidence that simply expanding insurance coverage is not a thorough solution to reducing โคall forms โขof substance-related acute care โutilization. The study highlights the โขcomplex interplay between insurance access and substanceโ useโฃ disorder treatment, suggesting that additional interventions may be necessary to address the growing opioid โขcrisis and related โคemergency careโ needsโฃ among young adults.