2023
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12155122
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Medicare Advantage in Soft Tissue Sarcoma May Be Associated with Worse Patient Outcomes

Abstract: Medicare Advantage healthcare plans may present undue impediments that result in disparities in patient outcomes. This study aims to compare the outcomes of patients who underwent STS resection based on enrollment in either traditional Medicare (TM) or Medicare Advantage (MA) plans. The Premier Healthcare Database was utilized to identify all patients ≥65 years old who underwent surgery for resection of a lower-extremity STS from 2015 to 2021. These patients were then subdivided based on their Medicare enrollm… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…155 The impact of SES on insurance types also showed impediments that result in disparities of outcomes among STS patients, showing higher odds of pulmonary embolism, surgical-site infetion, and 90-day hospital death in Medicare Advantage patients. 156 Importantly, disparities exist across age, insurance, and geography on amputation rates and, by extension, survival for nonmetastatic extremity STS. 157 The myriad of these findings was summarized in a study that utilized the NCDB to evaluate 49,754 patients with STS, finding that commercial insurance was associated with earlier diagnosis, receipt of RT therapy, and OS in patients <65 years old.…”
Section: Socioeconomic and Insurance Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…155 The impact of SES on insurance types also showed impediments that result in disparities of outcomes among STS patients, showing higher odds of pulmonary embolism, surgical-site infetion, and 90-day hospital death in Medicare Advantage patients. 156 Importantly, disparities exist across age, insurance, and geography on amputation rates and, by extension, survival for nonmetastatic extremity STS. 157 The myriad of these findings was summarized in a study that utilized the NCDB to evaluate 49,754 patients with STS, finding that commercial insurance was associated with earlier diagnosis, receipt of RT therapy, and OS in patients <65 years old.…”
Section: Socioeconomic and Insurance Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%