Abstract
Objective
To determine whether the Veterans Health Administration’s (VHA) efforts to expand access to home- and community-based services (HCBS) after the 2001 Millennium Act significantly changed Veterans’ utilization of institutional, paid home, and unpaid home care relative to a non-VHA user Medicare population that was not exposed to HCBS expansion efforts.
Data Sources
We used linkages between the Health and Retirement Study and VHA administrative data from 1998 until 2012.
Study Design
We conducted a retrospective-matched cohort study using coarsened exact matching to ensure balance on observable characteristics for VHA users (n = 943) and nonusers (n = 6106). We used a difference-in-differences approach with a person fixed-effects estimator.
Data Collection/Extraction Methods
Individuals were eligible for inclusion in the analysis if they were age 65 or older and indicated that they were covered by Medicare insurance in 1998. Individuals were excluded if they were covered by Medicaid insurance at baseline. Individuals were considered exposed to VHA HCBS expansion efforts if they were enrolled in the VHA and used VHA services.
Principal Findings
Theory predicts that an increase in the public allocation of HCBS will decrease the utilization of its substitutes (e.g., institutional care and unpaid caregiving). We found that after the Millennium Act was passed, there were no observed differences between VHA users and nonusers in the probability of using institutional long-term care (0.7% points, 95% CI: −0.009, 0.022) or in receiving paid help with activities of daily living (0.06% points, 95% CI: −0.011, 0.0125). VHA users received more hours of unpaid care post-Millennium Act (1.48, 95% CI: −0.232, 3.187), though this effect was not significant once we introduced controls for mental health.
Conclusions
Our findings indicate that mandating access to HCBS services does not necessarily imply that access to these services will follow suit.