Children’s Preventive Healthcare Costs Dropped Under the ACA.

Children’s Preventive Healthcare Costs Dropped Under the ACA
Checkups with out-of-pocket costs dropped from 54.2 percent of visits in 2010 to 14.5 percent in 2018.
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) dramatically increased children’s preventive healthcare while reducing out-of-pocket costs, according to a new School of Public Health study.
Published in JAMA Network Open, the study found that checkups with out-of-pocket costs dropped from 54.2 percent of visits in 2010 (the year the ACA passed) to 14.5 percent in 2018.
“This is a great feather in the cap of the ACA, even though there is still some work to do,” says study lead author Paul Shafer, assistant professor of health law, policy & management.
“We found that one in seven families were still charged something for their children’s well visits,” he says, “and costs can be a barrier to parents keeping their kids up-to-date with preventive care.”
Shafer and colleagues analyzed national health insurance claims data from 2006 through 2018 for children 0 to 17 years old.
Even before the ACA became law in 2010, the researchers saw improving trends in preventive pediatric care. The proportion of children who went to the doctor at least once per year without having a preventive checkup dropped from 39.3 percent in 2006 to 29.0 percent in 2018. The researchers also found a 60-percent increase in the proportion of so-called “sick” visits (for anything other than a checkup) that included one or more preventive services, such as immunizations or recommended screenings. The researchers write that this may mean pediatricians are increasingly taking advantage of any opportunity they can to provide preventive care.
“As deductibles and copays continue to rise, the promise of free preventive care has become a very popular benefit of the ACA,” Shafer says. “According to our results, we are continuing to get better at delivering on that promise for children.”
The study was coauthored by Alex Hoagland, a doctoral candidate in economics at the College of Arts & Sciences; and Heather E. Hsu, assistant professor of pediatrics at the School of Medicine and a pediatric hospitalist at Boston Medical Center.