335847
Prevalence and utilization of medical care services in persons with autism spectrum disorder using Medicare claims
CMS national 5% sample claims (2008-2010) were used to identify beneficiaries with autism diagnoses (299.xx) in the professional services (Carrier) file. Any single claim was designated as a case. These were linked to other standard claims files. The nationally weighted estimate of persons with autism in Medicare files was compared with SSA/SSI data for beneficiaries eligible due to autistic disorder in 2010.
A national estimate of the number of expected persons with autism in the Medicare 100% claim file was 15,840. National estimate 65+ was only 1,280. 90% of records were for persons less than 35. Most (~66%) case claims had no autism diagnosis. SSA disability records indicate 151,260 persons <65 with autistic disorder in 2010.
Low estimates for older age cases are consistent with cohort effects. Disabled SSI recipients <65 are automatically enrolled in Medicare Part A (hospital) insurance after 24 months. Part B insurance requires premiums but most states automatically enroll SSI recipients into premium support programs (e.g., QMB’s). Discrepancy might be explained by comprehensive state Medicaid coverage, low realized access to care, poor documentation of diagnosis in claims, or consequences of disability program rules.
Learning Areas:
EpidemiologyPublic health or related research
Learning Objectives:
Discuss the pros and cons of using Medicare data for studying persons with autism.
Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: 20 years of progression experience in public health and health services research on chronic disease.
Any relevant financial relationships? No
I agree to comply with the American Public Health Association Conflict of Interest and Commercial Support Guidelines, and to disclose to the participants any off-label or experimental uses of a commercial product or service discussed in my presentation.