Drivers of Hospital Length of Stay in Medicaid and Commercially Insured Mother-Infant Pairs With a Diagnosis of Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome
Published in Medical Care, December 1, 2019 | Online publication on September 18, 2019
Author(s): Lauren E Parlett, Abiy Agiro, Susan Brown, Mary Wilt, Amy Portzline, Jacqueline Verburg, Karen Shea, Andrea Devries
DOI: 10.1097/MLR.0000000000001199 | Pubmed ID: 31567861
Abstract
Background: The occurrence of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) mirrors the growing opioid epidemic in the United States. As Medicaid covers a majority of cases, the commercially insured population has largely been ignored for NAS risk.
Objective: The objective of this study was to examine Medicaid and commercially insured mother-infant pairs to determine demographic and clinical characteristics associated with NAS length of stay (LOS).
Research design: This observational, descriptive case-series study utilized administrative claims from HealthCore Integrated Research Database to measure maternal characteristics for 6 months before delivery, and neonatal characteristics and health care service utilization for 3 months after NAS diagnosis. Bootstrapped regressions were used to model LOS.
Results: The sample included 1807 mother-infant pairs. Most infants (79%) had Medicaid coverage (Medicaid: N=1419; Commercial: N=388). Although all infants had NAS, Medicaid-insured mothers had more prevalent drug abuse (70.8% vs. 41.0%; P<0.0001), but fewer used prescription opioids (45.3% vs. 60.8%; P<0.0001) compared with commercially insured mothers. Commercially insured infants were sicker, with a higher prevalence of complex chronic conditions, and yet Medicaid-insured infants were admitted to neonatal intensive care unit at a much higher rate (91.1% vs. 78.9%; P<0.0001). After adjustment, neonatal intensive care unit admission (+6.7 d, 95% confidence interval: 4.5-9.3) and chronic complex conditions (+5.2 d, 95% confidence interval: 3.8-6.6) contributed most to LOS.
Conclusion: A re-evaluation of obstetrical management towards a focus on the history of possible opioid and substance use regardless of insurance type and demographic background might inform efforts to reduce LOS.
Funding Transparency
This work was possible through:
- No Funding Sought or Awarded
Tags
Analytic: descriptive | length of stay
Data Source: claims | mother-infant linkage | medicaid | commercially insured
Research Focus: infant outcomes | opioids
Study Design: case series
Entry last updated (DMY): 28-11-2024.