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327457
Plan-switching patterns among Medicare beneficiaries who disenroll


Wednesday, November 4, 2015 : 1:10 p.m. - 1:30 p.m.

Marc N. Elliott, PhD, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA
Jill Gurvey, MPH, RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA
Nate Orr, MA, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA
Cheryl Damberg, RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA
Since 2013, Medicare has conducted an annual survey to understand the reasons why beneficiaries voluntarily disenroll from Medicare Advantage (MA) and Prescription Drug Plans (PDPs). Little is known about which types of plans beneficiaries choose when they switch and the factors associated with the types of switches beneficiaries make. We examined the switching patterns of Medicare beneficiaries (i.e., shifting to fee-for-service, to another plan of the same type, or to a different plan type) and the association between beneficiary choice of plan type and reasons for disenrollment, the plan’s Star rating, and beneficiary characteristics.   

We used data from the 2013 Medicare disenrollment survey, based on a random sample of 51,895 Medicare beneficiaries who voluntarily disenrolled from MA-PD or PDP plan coverage. We constructed five composite reasons for disenrolling: financial considerations, concerns about benefits and coverage, patient experiences with prescription drugs, patient experiences with the plan, and the plans’ coverage of specific doctors and hospitals. Beneficiary and plan characteristics were based on Medicare administrative sources and self-reported survey responses. Person-level multinomial logistic regression models estimated adjusted odds ratios for each predictor and each possible plan switch (e.g., MA-PD to PDP) relative to choosing another plan of the same type. 

For both MA-PD and PDP, most disenrollees (72-75%) switched to another plan of the same type. Only 16% switched from MA-PD to PDP and 23% from PDP to MA-PD; beneficiaries rarely switched to an MA-Only plan or into fee-for-service without PDP coverage. Financial reasons for disenrolling were particularly associated with retaining the same type of coverage. In contrast, citing disenrollment reasons related to patient experience was positively associated with switching to a different coverage type. Higher educational attainment (a proxy for higher socioeconomic status) was positively correlated with a switch to a PDP (from either MA or PDP), suggesting such beneficiaries preferred more flexible access to doctors and hospitals but with greater out-of-pocket expenses. Beneficiaries who disenrolled from plans with high Star quality ratings were more likely to have switched plan type, suggesting they may not like the type of coverage, whereas disenrollees from plans with low Star ratings tended to switch to another plan of the same coverage type. 

These findings may inform plan quality improvement efforts. Clear communication of cost, patient experience, and other quality data can improve plan choice. Nonetheless, some level of disenrollment may indicate activated patients responding appropriately to information only obtainable through interactions with plans.

Learning Areas:

Conduct evaluation related to programs, research, and other areas of practice
Public health or related public policy
Public health or related research
Social and behavioral sciences

Learning Objectives:
Describe the plan-switching patterns of Medicare beneficiaries. Discuss the how newly-chosen plans differ by reasons for disenrollment, the plan’s quality ratings, and beneficiary characteristics.

Keyword(s): Decision-Making, Medicare

Presenting author's disclosure statement:

Qualified on the content I am responsible for because: I am the principal /co-principal of multiple federally-funded quality-of-care contracts, including the contract that funded this work. I have published >260 articles in peer-reviewed journals, was named among the world’s 1% most-cited researchers 2002-2012 by Thomas Reuters, and serve on the editorial boards of HSR, Medical Care R&R, JGIM, and POQ. My research interests include Medicare, survey methodology, consumer evaluation of healthcare, statistical analysis, vulnerable populations, and health disparities.
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.