Mandated checkups, knowledge of own health status, and chronic care utilization: The effect of HIV medical evaluation mandates on healthcare quality and expenditure in a US-single payer system

Senay Topal*, Patrick Richard, John Young, Anuradha Ganesan, Todd Gleeson, Jason Blaylock, Jason F. Okulicz, Xiuping Chu, Brian K. Agan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In an effort to improve military readiness, in 2014 the US Air Force reduced the frequency of mandated HIV medical evaluation visits from every 6 months to every 12 months. We employ this natural experiment using data for 2676 active-duty Military Health System beneficiaries living with HIV with a difference-in-differences empirical strategy using the Army, Navy, and Marines as a control group to estimate the causal effect of reducing the frequency of mandated evaluation visits on the quality and cost of medical care for active-duty military members living with HIV. We find that reducing the frequency of mandated HIV medical evaluation visits reduced the likelihood of regular HIV visits by 23 percentage points but did not affect the likelihood of receiving other preventive care, adhering to HIV therapy, or maintaining viral testing and suppression. The study finds evidence that the recommended level of regular HIV visits may be higher than necessary. The reduction in regular HIV visits was not associated with a similar reduction in the studied quality of care measures, therefore, the effect of alleviating the mandate was overall positive in terms of reducing healthcare utilization without adversely affecting preventive care, HIV therapy, or viral testing and suppression.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberPMID: 37768123
Pages (from-to)59-81
Number of pages23
JournalHealth Economics
Volume33
Issue number1
Early online date28 Sep 2023
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • behavior
  • health
  • information
  • knowledge
  • uncertainty

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