Medicaid Payments and Five Star Quality Ratings in the Nursing Home Sector: A Facility Level Analysis
Edward Miller, John Bowblis, Elizabeth Simpson, Marc Cohen

TL;DR
This study finds that higher Medicaid payments are linked to better nursing home quality ratings, especially when payments cover more than 90% of care costs.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on the relationship between Medicaid payment levels and nursing home quality ratings at the facility level.
Findings
Higher Medicaid payment rates are positively associated with average star ratings of nursing homes.
Medicaid payment-to-cost ratios above 0.90 show a positive association with star ratings.
Adjusting for covariates and state effects confirms the link between payment levels and quality.
Abstract
Medicaid is the primary and largest single payer for nursing home (NH) care in the United States. The Five-Star Quality Rating System rates NHs from 1 (much below average) to 5 (much above average) based on health inspections, quality measures, and staffing. Ample research on factors that contribute to NH quality exists, yet, due to data constraints, the question of how Medicaid payment levels affect the quality at individual facilities remains largely unexplored. This study examined whether Medicaid payment rates and Medicaid payment-to-cost ratios affect NH 5-star ratings. Star ratings were obtained from Care Compare historical archives, Medicaid per diem payment rates were collected directly from the states, and Medicare payment-to-cost ratios were calculated using estimated Medicaid per diem costs from the Medicare Cost Reports. The study population consisted of 9,475 freestanding…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeriatric Care and Nursing Homes · Healthcare innovation and challenges · Healthcare Policy and Management
