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Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision-Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS Jack H. Fyock, PhD, MSI
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Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan

Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision-Making Experiment

Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS Jack H. Fyock, PhD, MSI

Page 2: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Acknowledgments & Disclaimer

• Thanks to Chris Smith Ritter, Kelly Dougherty, Catherine Jo, and Sara Bentley for their contributions to this research.

• The statements expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services or Market Strategies, Inc.

Page 3: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

• In anticipation of MMA, we were interested in learning about how Medicare beneficiaries make trade-offs among various attributes when making health plan choices.

• Recent studies, primarily looking at employees, found that people do make trade-offs, and willingness to make different kinds of trade-offs varies by demographics and health status.

• A couple of studies that looked at Medicare beneficiaries found that premiums and drug benefits were most important, and many chose more tightly managed care to obtain other benefits.

Introduction

Page 4: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Introduction

• To examine health care decision-making among Medicare beneficiaries, we conducted a conjoint exercise, in which participants made a series of choices among hypothetical plans that varied in terms of several attributes.

• We also looked at how attribute preferences and trade-offs varied across subgroups, such as those who have Medigap vs. Managed Care, those who are lower-income, and those who have high drug costs.

• And, we looked changes over time in plan choices with the introduction of the MMA Preventive Services and Drug Benefit provisions.

Page 5: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Method

• Dates—July-September 2003• Locations—Philadelphia, PA; Los

Angeles, CA; Atlanta, GA; Chicago, IL• Participants—Nearly 300 Medicare

senior beneficiaries• ~65% under 75 years• ~65% female• ~85% white

Page 6: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Method

• Participant Subgroups• ~60% Original Medicare with Medigap

(vs. Managed Care)• ~35% Lower-Income (Single <$18,500 or

Married <$22,233)• ~40% Medigap with High Rx Spending

(>$250 per month)

Page 7: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Method

• The study method was a conjoint analysis within-subjects decision-making experiment, for which each participant made a series of choices among hypothetical plans that varied in terms of several attributes.

• There were 17 trials.• Each trial involved making a choice among

three hypothetical plan options.• Plan attributes included prescription drug

coverage, preventive services, doctor choice, plan premium, etc., with 2-3 levels per attribute.

Page 8: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.
Page 9: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Analytic Plan

1. Average Importance—Analysis of conjoint data to assess how beneficiaries weight different attributes when making a choice

2. Market Simulation—Analysis of conjoint data to classify beneficiaries into product shares of preference based on their choices

Page 10: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Average Importance

Attributes Overall MedigapManaged Care

Physician Choice 10.71 16.89 2.78

Preventive Services 13.32 13.38 14.23

Out-of-Area Coverage 2.65 3.37 1.68

Plan Premium 29.24 24.83 33.09

Rx Coverage 20.96 19.57 23.93

Vision and Dental Coverage

15.87 14.13 17.18

Quality / Customer Satisfaction

7.25 7.82 7.11

Page 11: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Average Importance

Attributes OverallMedigapLow Rx Spend

Medigap High Rx Spend

Physician Choice 16.89 17.06 16.58

Preventive Services 13.38 13.10 14.94

Out-of-Area Coverage 3.37 5.40 1.50

Plan Premium 24.83 28.25 18.72

Rx Coverage 19.57 15.46 24.69

Vision and Dental Coverage

14.13 12.91 15.63

Quality / Customer Satisfaction

7.82 7.83 7.93

Page 12: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Average Importance

Attributes Overall Lower IncomeHigher Income

Physician Choice 10.71 9.65 11.47

Preventive Services 13.32 11.51 14.19

Out-of-Area Coverage 2.65 2.79 2.58

Plan Premium 29.24 35.22 26.49

Rx Coverage 20.96 17.33 22.23

Vision and Dental Coverage

15.87 15.59 16.01

Quality / Customer Satisfaction

7.25 7.91 7.03

Page 13: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market Simulation—Current

Current – FFS+Supp.• Any Doctor• “No” Preventive

Services • Out of Area

Coverage • Monthly Premium

$120 • No Rx coverage • No Vision and

Dental • Satisfaction Good

Current – Medicare Advan.• Network of Doctors• Preventive Services • No Out of Area

Coverage • Monthly Premium $60 • Rx coverage $1200• No Vision and Dental • Satisfaction Good

Vs.

Page 14: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market Simulation—2005

2005 – FFS+Supp.• Any Doctor• Preventive

Services • Yes Out of Area

Coverage • Monthly Premium

$120 • No Rx coverage • No Vision and Dental • Satisfaction Good

Current – Medicare Advan.• Network of Doctors• Preventive Services • No Out of Area

Coverage • Monthly Premium $60 • Rx coverage $1200• No Vision and Dental • Satisfaction Good

Vs.

Page 15: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market Simulation—2006

2006 – FFS+Supp.• Any Doctor• Preventive Services • Yes Out of Area

Coverage • Monthly Premium

$120 • Rx coverage $1200• No Vision and Dental • Satisfaction Good

Current – Medicare Advan.• Network of Doctors• Preventive Services • No Out of Area

Coverage • Monthly Premium $60 • Rx coverage $1200• No Vision and Dental • Satisfaction Good

Vs.

Page 16: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market SimulationOverall

Overall

Model FFS+Supplement Medicare Advantage

Current 20.33 79.67

2005 30.31 69.69

2006 50.27 49.73

Page 17: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market SimulationMedigap vs. Managed Care

Medigap Managed Care

Model FFS+Supp. Medicare Advan. FFS+Supp. Medicare Advan.

Current 27.76 72.24 11.00 89.00

2005 40.10 59.90 18.72 81.28

2006 60.63 39.37 38.87 61.13

Page 18: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market SimulationMedigap High vs. Low Rx Spending

Low Spenders High spenders

Model FFS+Supp. Medicare Advan. FFS+Supp. Medicare Advan.

Current 32.83 67.17 22.66 78.34

2005 45.72 54.28 34.16 65.84

2006 62.32 37.68 59.79 40.21

Page 19: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Market SimulationLower vs. Higher Income

Lower Income Higher Income

Model FFS+Supp. Medicare Advan. FFS+Supp. Medicare Advan.

Current 24.38 75.62 18.24 81.76

2005 31.75 68.25 29.88 70.12

2006 45.07 54.93 53.89 46.11

Page 20: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Conclusions

• Overall, we found that after plan premium, drug coverage was the most important attribute, and that preventive services was moderately important.

• Not surprisingly, therefore, with the addition of the MMA provisions, the very strong preference for managed care decreases and then seems to disappear.

• Interestingly, although the strength of the preference decreases over time, those currently in managed care consistently prefer managed care.

Page 21: Attributes Important to Medicare Beneficiaries Making Health Plan Choices: A Conjoint Analysis Decision- Making Experiment Sunyna S. Williams, PhD, CMS.

Conclusions

• Future research should also look at variables other than attributes that could affect health care choices, such as preference for one-stop shopping or motivation and skill to be an active consumer.

• These findings have implications both for beneficiary education and decision-support initiatives by Medicare and other stakeholders and for plan marketing activities.