Rates of hospitalization and major amputations among racial and ethnic minority adults with diabetic foot ulcers decreased in states that adopted Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), according to researchers at the University of Arizona Health Sciences.
Diabetic foot ulceration and amputation have serious health and financial implications, and the disproportionate rate at which it occurs among patients in lower socioeconomic groups is a largely recognized issue within the fields of medicine and vascular surgery. The study is one of few to explore health care policy and examine patient outcomes connected to increased access to insurance coverage, according to lead author Tze-Woei Tan, MBBS, MPH, FACS, associate professor of surgery at the UArizona College of Medicine—Tucson.
“There are many reasons that lead to elevating the rate of amputation for vulnerable and underserved populations, one of which is health insurance coverage,” said Dr. Tan, a vascular and endovascular surgeon in the Department of Surgery. “Our data suggest that if you expand insurance coverage to those in need, they could receive better care and have improved outcomes.”
The paper, “Rates of Diabetes-Related Major Amputations Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Adults Following Medicaid Expansion Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” was published in JAMA Network Open.
The study examined 115,071 hospitalizations for diabetic foot ulcerations among 20- to 64-year-old racial and ethnic minority adults—African American, Asian and Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaska Native, Hispanic and adults of other racial or ethnic identification. Researchers compared rates of amputation in select early-adopter areas where Medicaid was expanded prior to 2014—12 states and Washington D.C.—with amputation rates in seven states that did not expand Medicaid at that time.
They found that from January 2013 through September 2015, hospitalizations among minority adults increased 3% in early-adopter states and 8% in nonadopter states. For minority adults without insurance, hospitalization rates decreased 35% after expansion in early-adopter states and increased 26% in nonadopter states.
There was no increase in amputation rates among minority adults after expansion in early-adopter states, while nonadopter states recorded a 9% increase in amputations. The amputation rate for minority adults with Medicaid or no insurance decreased by 33% in early-adopter states with no change in nonadopter states.
“The paper suggests that early ACA implementation was associated with decreased diabetes-related leg amputation among underserved minority adults,” Dr. Tan said.
Diabetic foot ulcerations and accompanying amputations are a leading cause of mortality for patients with diabetes and carry a heavy financial burden for patients and the health care system.
In 2017, the five-year mortality rates for ulcerations and minor and major amputations were 30.5%, 46.2% and 56.6%, respectively, according to prior research by senior author David G. Armstrong, professor of surgery at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and podiatric surgeon with Keck Medicine of USC. In comparison, the five-year pooled mortality for cancer was 31%.
Up to one-third of people with diabetes will have a foot ulceration at some point during their lifetime. More than half of these take longer than nine months to heal, becoming chronic diabetic ulcerations that account for 80% of amputations among people with diabetes, Dr. Tan said.
Additionally, racial and ethnic minority adults with diabetes are more likely than white adults to delay care until they have a more advanced foot infection and extensive comorbidities. Diabetic foot ulceration and amputation leads to reduced physical function, a lower quality of life, decreased mobility, and an increase in hospitalization and mortality.
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