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Patterns of healthcare use and employment among people with disabilities
Authors:Kathleen C. Thomas  Alan R. Ellis
Affiliation:Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 725 MLK Blvd., Chapel Hill, NC 27514, USA
Abstract:BackgroundEmployment rates among people with disabilities are low. Poor health is often cited as a barrier to work. Disability or a lack of disability-related resources may interfere with the ability to secure and maintain work.ObjectiveThis paper presents an exploratory examination of the association between variation in service use and employment.MethodsThe paper uses data from North Carolina Medicaid recipients age 18–64 who were eligible in fiscal year 2007 due to receipt of Supplemental Security Income (n = 60,190). Logistic regression was used to model employment as a function of variation in healthcare use, with conditional models stratifying by days of service use and unconditional models run by quantile of service use.ResultsPeople with the least service use (<12 days) had the highest employment rate (over 20%); those with the most service use (≥54 days) had the lowest employment rate (7.8%). Those in between displayed remarkably little variation in employment rate by level of service use. The amount of week-to-week variation in service use was positively associated with the probability of employment.ConclusionsAmong Medicaid enrollees with disabilities who use outpatient services, amount of service use is negatively associated with employment and variation in use is positively associated with employment. Future research involving more extensive administrative data, primary data collection, and the use of mixed methods would improve understanding of these findings.
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