Authors

  1. Simpson, Kathleen Rice PhD, RNC, CNS-BC, FAAN

Article Content

When a patient gives birth in a hospital, the hospital is reimbursed a predetermined amount for her care during labor, birth, and postpartum, and for the baby's care, based on her health insurance coverage (Table). For example, the government (Medicaid) coverage payment is generally less than one-half of the amount for the birth hospitalization paid from private commercial insurance (Truven Health Analytics, 2013; Valencia et al., 2022). Recent data from 2020 inpatient delivery claims in 38 states from the Health Care Cost Institute and the Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (Valencia et al., 2022) found on average the difference between fee-for-service (FFS) Medicaid and employer-sponsored health insurance (ESI) payment to hospitals for all births was $8,732 higher for commercial insurance ($11,084 higher for cesarean births and $7,461 higher for vaginal births). The inequity in payment to hospitals varies by state. Some of largest inequities in payment for birth hospitalization are in states such as California ($15, 007 difference between FFS Medicaid and ESI [$21,140 versus $6,133]), Florida ($14, 174 difference between FFS Medicaid and ESI [$17,340 versus $3,166]) and West Virginia ($13,699 difference between FFS Medicaid and ESI [$17,843 versus $4,144]) as per Valencia et al., (2022). Based on these same data (Valencia et al., 2022), states with the smallest inequities in payment for birth hospitalization are New York ($1,817 difference between FFS Medicaid and ESI [$20,092 versus $18,275]), Washington DC ($4,696 difference between FFS Medicaid and ESI [$16,092 versus $11, 396]), and Utah ($5,125 difference between FFS Medicaid and ESI [$13,096 versus $7,944]).

  
Table: Overview of I... - Click to enlarge in new windowTable: Overview of Inequities in Payments to Hospitals for Birth Servicesa

If the payer mix of the birthing hospital is such that there is a higher percentage of patients with Medicaid insurance than commercial insurance, the inequity in payment to the hospital for maternity services can be cumulatively quite significant. Hospitals with a high percentage of patients covered by Medicaid are sometimes termed safety net hospitals (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2022; Winkelman & Vickery, 2019). Patients who give birth at these types of hospitals often have more morbidities and are at higher risk of adverse outcomes than those who give birth at community hospitals (Fingar et al., 2018; McKinley et al., 2021), yet safety net hospitals tend to be consistently reimbursed a lot less for the same or even more intensive maternity care given the overall health of their population, because of their patients' insurance status (Valencia et al., 2022).

 

Hospitals use insurance payments for salaries and benefits of their work force of health care professionals (the largest percentage of whom are nurses), hospital infrastructure, equipment, supplies, facilities upkeep, new construction, recruitment, advertising, etc. The amount hospitals receive as payment for patient care is a major determinant of their overall budget. Poor insurance reimbursement can result in inadequate nurse staffing, a lean management team, insufficient attention to nursing continuing education and competence validation, difficulty in recruiting nurses due to pay and benefits not commensurate with hospitals in the area, old equipment, outdated facilities, and can negatively affect patient satisfaction, patient outcomes, and hospital reputation.

 

The inequity in payment for the same care (for example, birth hospitalization) based on patient insurance status creates conditions that promote inequity in care. Poor reimbursement for birth hospitalization may be a factor in challenges to budgetary support for consistent safe nursing staffing as per national standards (Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses, 2022; Simpson et al., 2023). Patients with Medicaid coverage often have less options for types and settings of maternity care (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, 2020). The unintentional consequences of the payment structure in the health care system in the United States is that it favors patients with commercial insurance and hospitals with a high percentage of patients covered by that insurance compared to patients covered by Medicaid and hospitals with a high percentage of patients covered by Medicaid.

 

Nurses should advocate for changes in the hospital reimbursement structure for childbirth to promote equity in maternal and neonatal outcomes. The current payment structure is discriminatory. Health care services experts and clinical leaders in maternity care should be asking these questions on a national level and seeking solutions:

 

* Why is the value of maternity care for Medicaid patients allowed to be deemed worth less than one-half of that for patients covered by commercial insurance?

 

* Why is this an accepted payment structure?

 

* What are the implications for patient care and outcomes based on this long-standing hospital payment inequity?

 

* What can be done to make payment for maternity care services equitable and not based type of insurance coverage?

 

* Shouldn't maternity care for the childbirth hospitalization be paid the same for all patients and hospitals?

 

* Why doesn't Medicaid pay hospitals the same for birth hospitalization as the amount paid by commercial insurance?

 

* Could this payment inequity be a contributor to the extremely unfavorable data on maternal mortality in the United States when compared to peer countries?

 

 

References

 

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (2022, December). Severe maternal morbidity (SMM) by state (HCUP Fast Stats). Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project. https://datatools.ahrq.gov/hcup-fast-stats/?type=subtab&tab=hcupfsse&count=3[Context Link]

 

Association of Women's Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses. (2022). Standards for professional registered nurse staffing for perinatal units. Nursing for Women's Health, 26(4), e1-e94. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nwh.2022.02.001[Context Link]

 

Fingar K. R., Hambrick M. M., Heslin K. C., Moore J. E. (2018, September). Trends and disparities in delivery hospitalizations involving severe maternal morbidity, 2006-2015. HCUP Statistical Brief No. 243, 1-21. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/reports/statbriefs/sb243-Severe-Maternal-Morbidity-D[Context Link]

 

McKinley L. P., Wen T., Gyamfi-Bannerman C., Wright J. D., Goffman D., Sheen J. J., D'Alton M. E., Friedman A. M. (2021). Hospital safety-net burden and risk for readmissions and severe maternal morbidity. American Journal of Perinatology, 38(S1), e359-e366. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0040-1710544[Context Link]

 

National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. (2020). Birth settings in America: Outcomes, quality, access, and choice. The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/25636[Context Link]

 

Simpson K. R., Spetz J., Gay C. L., Fletcher J., Landstrom G. L, Lyndon A. (2023). Hospital characteristics associated with nurse staffing during labor and birth: Inequities for the most vulnerable maternity patients, Nursing Outlook. 71(3), 101960. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.outlook.2023.101960[Context Link]

 

Truven Health Analytics. (2013). The cost of having a baby in the United States. Author. http://www.nationalpartnership.org/our-work/resources/health-care/maternity/arch[Context Link]

 

Valencia Z., Sen A., Kurowski D., Martin K., Bozzi D. (2022, June 9). Average payments for childbirth among the commercially insured and fee-for-service Medicaid. Health Care Cost Institute. https://healthcostinstitute.org/hcci-research/average-payments-for-childbirth-am[Context Link]

 

Winkelman T. N. A., Vickery K. D. (2019). Refining the definition of US safety-net hospitals to improve population health. JAMA Network Open, 2(8), e198562. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.8562[Context Link]