Volume 41 | Number 4p1 | August 2006

Abstract List

Elizabeth T. Momany, Stephen D. Flach, Forrest D. Nelson, Peter C. Damiano Ph.D.


Objective

To determine the cost savings attributable to the implementation and expansion of a primary care case management (PCCM) program on Medicaid costs per member in Iowa from 1989 to 1997.


Data Sources

Medicaid administrative data from Iowa aggregated at the county level.


Study Design

Longitudinal analysis of costs per member per month, analyzed by category of medical expense using weighted least squares. We compared the actual costs with the expected costs (in the absence of the PCCM program) to estimate cost savings attributable to the PCCM program.


Principal Findings

We estimated that the PCCM program was associated with a savings of $66 million to the state of Iowa over the study period. Medicaid expenses were 3.8 percent less than what they would have been in the absence of the PCCM program. Effects of the PCCM program appeared to grow stronger over time. Use of the PCCM program was associated with increases in outpatient care and pharmaceutical expenses, but a decrease in hospital and physician expenses.


Conclusions

Use of a Medicaid PCCM program was associated with substantial aggregate cost savings over an 8‐year period, and this effect became stronger over time. Cost reductions appear to have been mediated by substituting outpatient care for inpatient care.