Medicaid expansions and differences in guideline-adherent cervical cancer screening between American Indian and white women

Individual Author(s) / Organizational Author
Gartner, Danielle
Islam, Jessica
Margerison, Claire
Publisher
Wiley
Date
January 2023
Publication
Cancer Medicine
Abstract / Description

Background Although preventable through screening, cervical cancer incidence and mortality are higher among American Indian and Alaska Native women (AIAN) than White women. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act's (ACA) Medicaid expansions may uniquely impact access and use of cervical cancer screening among AIAN women and ultimately alleviate this disparity. 

Methods Using Medicaid eligible AIAN (N = 4681) and White (N = 57,661) women aged 18–64 years from the 2010–2020 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, we implemented difference-in-differences regression to estimate the association between the Medicaid expansions and guideline-adherent cervical cancer screening and health care coverage. 

Results The Medicaid expansions were not associated with guideline-adherent cervical cancer screening (AIAN: −1 percentage point [ppt] [95% confidence interval, CI: −4, 2 ppts]; White: 3 ppts [95% CI: −0, 6 ppts]), but were associated with a 2 ppt increase (95% CI: 0, 4 ppt) in having had a pap test in the last 5 years among White women. The Medicaid expansions were also associated with increases in having a health plan (AIAN: 5 ppts [95% CI: 1, 9]; White: 11 ppts [95% CI: 7, 15]) and decreases in avoiding medical care due to costs (AIAN: −8 ppts [95% CI: −13, −2]; White: −6 ppts [95% CI: −9, −4]). 

Conclusions While we observed improvements in health care coverage, we did not observe changes to guideline-adherent cervical cancer screening following the ACA's Medicaid expansions. Given the disproportionate burden of cervical cancer among AIAN women, identifying ways to improve cervical cancer screening uptake and delivery should be prioritized to reduce preventable deaths. (author abstract) 

Artifact Type
Research
Reference Type
Journal Article
Priority Population
Ethnic and racial groups
Women and girls
P4HE Authored
No
Topic Area
Illness/Disease/Injury/Wellbeing » Chronic Disease » Cancer
Policy and Practice » Policy & Law » Medicaid