Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996–1998 February 2002 Andrew B. Bindman, M.D. William Huen Karen Vranizan, M.A. Jean Yoon, M.H.S. Kevin Grumbach, M.D. Center for California Health Workforce Studies and Primary Care Research Center University of California, San Francisco and Lucy Streett, M.P.H. Medi-Cal Policy Institute Acknowledgments Funding for the surveys described in this report was provided by the Agency for Health Research and Quality (formerly the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research), the University of California Program on Access to Care, the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Bureau of Health Professions, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Funding for the preparation of this report was provided by the Medi-Cal Policy Institute. Both the primary care and specialist physician survey research protocols were reviewed and approved by the University of California San Francisco Committee on Human Research. About the Authors Andrew B. Bindman is the director of the Primary Care Research Center and a professor of medicine, epidemiology, and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco. Kevin Grumbach is the director of the Center for Health Workforce Studies and professor and vice-chair of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. Karen Vranizan is a senior statistician at the Primary Care Re- search Center. William Huen and Jean Yoon are both research assistants at the Primary Care Research Center. Lucy Streett is a policy analyst at the Medi-Cal Policy Institute. Copyright © 2002 Medi-Cal Policy Institute ISBN 1-929008-80-5 Medi-Cal Policy Institute 476 Ninth Street Oakland, CA 94607 tel: (510) 286-8976 fax: (510) 238-1382 www.medi-cal.org A project of the Additional copies of this and other publications can be obtained by calling the Medi-Cal Policy Institute at (510) 286-8976 or by visiting the Web site (www.medi-cal.org). Contents Executive Summary 1 I. Background 5 II. Survey Methods 7 III. Findings 11 A. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal 11 B. Medi-Cal Physician Characteristics 17 C. Physician Perceptions 25 D. Changes between 1996 and 1998 31 IV. Conclusions 35 Appendix 39 Notes 43 Executive Summary A series of recent studies and media reports suggest that access to physicians, particularly specialist physicians, may be problematic for Medi-Cal beneficiaries. However, there is little specific information about the extent of California physicians’ participation in Medi-Cal. Fur- ther, little is known about the characteristics of physicians who do and do not participate in caring for Medi-Cal patients, physicians’ attitudes toward Medi-Cal patients and the Medi-Cal program, or how Medi-Cal managed care affects physicians’ willingness to care for Medi-Cal and uninsured patients. The purpose of this report is to describe results from random-sample surveys of primary care and specialist physicians in California conducted by investigators at the University of Califor- nia, San Francisco in 1996 and 1998. The report analyzes physician participation in Medi- Cal, compares the characteristics of physicians who do and do not participate in caring for Medi-Cal patients, and describes physicians’ attitudes toward Medi-Cal patients and Medi- Cal managed care that might explain potential differences in participation. Key Findings Physician Participation in Medi-Cal ▪ Of those surveyed in 1998, 55 percent of primary care physicians and 57 per- cent of specialists reported having Medi-Cal patients in their practice. A simi- lar proportion reported that they were accepting new Medi-Cal patients into their practice. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 1 ▪ The average concentration of Medi-Cal patients in surveyed physicians’ prac- tices was 11 percent for primary care and 7 percent for specialist physicians. Half of participating physicians reported that less than 5 percent of their prac- tice was made up of Medi-Cal patients. As a result, 25 percent of primary care physicians provided approximately 80 percent of the primary care visits to Medi-Cal patients in 1998. ▪ On average, the number of available primary care physicians per capita for Medi-Cal beneficiaries in 1998 was one-third less than it was for the general population, and the number of specialist physicians available to Medi-Cal ben- eficiaries was more than one-half less than it was for the general population. ▪ Participation in Medi-Cal varied widely by physician specialty. The percentage of physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice ranged from 41 percent for orthopedic surgeons to 67 percent for obstetrician-gynecologists. ▪ Physician participation also varied widely across the 13 counties that were ex- amined. Only 38 percent of primary care physicians in Fresno had Medi-Cal patients in their practice in 1998, while 70 percent of primary care providers in Alameda and Solano participated in Medi-Cal. ▪ Overall, the ratio of primary care physicians available to Medi-Cal patients in 1998 (38 per 100,000) was well below the workforce standards established by the Health Resources Services Administration (which recommends 60 to 80 primary care physicians per 100,000 population). Medi-Cal Physician Characteristics ▪ Physicians who were from underrepresented minority groups, those who were Spanish-speaking, and those who worked in community clinics were more likely than other surveyed physicians to accept Medi-Cal patients. ▪ International Medical Graduates (IMGs) and physicians who were not board- certified were also more likely than other surveyed physicians to have Medi- Cal patients in their practice. ▪ Ninety percent of Med-Cal beneficiaries’ primary care visits and 97 percent of their specialty visits occurred in private physicians’ offices. In comparison, only 10 percent of primary care visits and 4 percent of specialty visits occurred in clinic settings. ▪ Primary care physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were nearly twice as likely as other surveyed physicians to have uninsured patients in their practice. Among specialists, the association between providing care to Medi-Cal beneficiaries and uninsured patients was even stronger. 2 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Physician Perceptions ▪ Approximately 80 percent of physicians surveyed in 1998 reported that they were very or somewhat satisfied with being a physician. This rating did not differ between physicians who did and did not have Medi-Cal patients in their practice. ▪ Most primary care physicians surveyed expressed negative opinions about the Medi-Cal program. Primary care physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice had more negative opinions of the program than physicians without Medi-Cal patients in their practice. ▪ Many surveyed physicians also expressed negative attitudes about Medi-Cal patients and about the transition of the Medi-Cal program to managed care. However, these attitudes were not predictive of whether or not physicians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. Changes between 1996 and 1998 ▪ The overall percentage of primary care physicians participating in Medi-Cal was stable between 1996 and 1998. However, 12 percent of physicians who had accepted Medi-Cal in 1996 were no longer doing so in 1998, and 13 per- cent of physicians who had not accepted Medi-Cal patients in 1996 were doing so in 1998. ▪ The expansion of Medi-Cal managed care between 1996 and 1998 was not associated with an increase or a decrease in the percentage of primary care physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. This information was not available for specialists, who were not included in the 1996 survey. Conclusions Nearly half of the physicians surveyed for this study reported that they did not accept Medi-Cal patients. Further, the ratio of primary care physicians available to Medi-Cal patients in 1998 was well below the workforce standards established by the Health Resources Services Administration. On average, only about two-thirds as many primary care physicians and about half as many specialist physicians were available to Medi-Cal patients in 1998 as were available to the population as a whole. Based on this information, it appears that California needs to reconsider its strategies for in- creasing physician participation in the Medi-Cal program. Survey findings indicate that Medi-Cal managed care does not appear to have significantly increased physicians’ willingness Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 3 to care for Medi-Cal patients, and that a reduction in the program’s administrative require- ments may need to be part of the solution. California’s strategy for addressing physicians’ participation in Medi-Cal will also need to take into consideration the diversity of California’s Medi-Cal patient population. Although the sur- vey findings indicate that physicians from underrepresented minority groups are more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practices, the number of minorities in the physician workforce remains disproportionately small. Therefore, the Medi-Cal program should consider how it can contribute toward the development of a diverse physician workforce in California. Although the findings from this survey are some of the most comprehensive available about physician participation in the Medi-Cal program, they were collected in 1998 and may not reflect the current environment. To address this concern, investigators at the University of California San Francisco, with the support of the California HealthCare Foundation and the Medi-Cal Policy Institute, are in the process of collecting updated survey data on Medi-Cal physician participation. In addition to providing a longitudinal follow-up of the primary care and specialist physicians described in this report, the new survey sample has been enhanced to incorporate additional primary care and specialist physicians, including those practicing in rural areas. 4 Medi-Cal Policy Institute I. Background Medicaid originated in the mid-1960s as a jointly financed federal and state health insurance program for low-income (predominantly women and children), disabled, and elderly Ameri- cans. Medi-Cal, California’s Medicaid program, is the largest state Medicaid program in the country. Medi-Cal provides health insurance to more than five million Californians at a cost of $23 billion annually. U.S. physicians are not obligated to care for Medicaid patients; their participation is voluntary. National studies have found that between 70 and 80 percent of urban primary care physicians care for Medicaid patients.1 Less information is available on the participation rates of special- ists. One study of office-based physicians in Florida performed in the early 1990s suggested that specialists were more likely than primary care physicians to accept new Medicaid patients.2 Several recent studies have explored the issue of physician participation in Medicaid programs. A 1999 study concluded that physician payments for Medicaid patients vary by state and low payment rates are associated with lower participation rates.3 Other studies have found that in addition to concerns about inadequate reimbursement, physicians have several other negative perceptions of Medicaid. For example, they report administrative hassles in working with the Medicaid program, an increased risk of being sued for malpractice by Medicaid patients, and problems in providing adequate care because of difficulties in obtaining specialty consultations or expensive tests.4,5 A high percentage of physicians also report that Medicaid patients have more complex psycho-social problems than do their other patients and that they perceive Medicaid patients to be ungrateful for and noncompliant with their care. The validity of physicians’ perceptions of Medicaid patients has been called into question by investigators who have found that Medicaid patients are in fact less likely to sue their physicians than are privately insured patients.6 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 5 There is little specific information about California physicians’ participation in Medi-Cal, but a recent survey found that more than half of all Medi-Cal beneficiaries surveyed reported dif- ficulties finding doctors to care for them.7 This may be because California’s physician fees for Medicaid patients are among the nation’s lowest.8 Media reports suggest that access to physi- cians, particularly specialist physicians, may be declining for Medi-Cal beneficiaries. Skaggs and others recently reported that they were able to make appointments for a fictional child with a broken arm and Medi-Cal insurance in only 3 out of 50 orthopedic practices in Cali- fornia that would accept the same child with private insurance.9 Various attempts have been made to improve Medicaid beneficiaries’ access to mainstream private office-based physicians. For example, increasing provider fees for caring for Medicaid patients has had some limited success.10 During the 1990s, states embraced the use of managed care for their Medicaid beneficiaries as a strategy to expand their patients’ access to care while controlling costs. In 1998, some portion of Medicaid beneficiaries were enrolled in managed care programs in 48 states. The total Medicaid enrollment in managed care nationwide that year was 16.6 million (53.6 percent of beneficiaries). Between 1994 and 1998, California increased the portion of its approximately five million Medi-Cal beneficiaries in managed care from 11 to 37 percent by implementing mandatory managed care on a county-by-county basis. One of the desired outcomes of the transition to managed care was that the potential reduction in administrative hassles and disparities in pay- ment between Medi-Cal and private health plans would increase physicians’ willingness to ac- cept Medi-Cal patients. However, it is possible that this health care delivery arrangement has reduced physicians’ willingness to provide uncompensated or undercompensated care. Little is known about the characteristics of physicians who do and do not participate in caring for Medi-Cal patients, physicians’ attitudes toward Medi-Cal patients and the Medi-Cal pro- gram, or the affects of Medi-Cal managed care on physicians’ willingness to care for Medi-Cal and uninsured patients. The purpose of this report is to describe results from random-sample surveys of primary care and specialist physicians in California regarding their involvement in traditional Medi-Cal fee-for-service and Medi-Cal managed care. The report compares the characteristics of physicians who do and do not participate in caring for Medi-Cal patients, and it describes physicians’ attitudes toward Medi-Cal patients and Medi-Cal managed care, which might explain potential differences in participation. 6 Medi-Cal Policy Institute II. Survey Methods Most of the data presented in this report come from a 1998 statewide survey of primary care and specialty physicians in California conducted by investigators from the University of Cali- fornia, San Francisco (UCSF). In addition, the last section of the report includes some longi- tudinal data from a 1996 survey of primary care physicians (also conducted by UCSF). Survey Sample In 1998, investigators at UCSF mailed self-administered questionnaires to primary care and specialist physicians practicing in the 13 largest urban counties in California (Alameda, Contra Costa, Fresno, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, Sacramento, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Solano). The study counties contained 79 percent of California’s practicing specialist physicians, 79 percent of the state’s population, and 78 per- cent of the state’s Medicaid population.11,12 The physicians were identified from the American Medical Association’s Physician Masterfile. The Masterfile contains continuously updated information on all U.S. allopathic physicians and many osteopathic physicians, including those who are not American Medical Association (AMA) members. To be eligible for the sur- vey, physicians had to be listed as providing direct patient care, not in training, and not em- ployed by the federal government. Specialists sampled were those who listed their primary specialty as cardiology, endocrinology, gastroenterology, general surgery, neurology, ophthalmology, or orthopedics. These specialties were chosen to provide a broad spectrum (procedure and non-procedure oriented) of both surgical and medical office-based subspecialties. Specialist physicians were selected using a probability sample stratified by county and by physician race/ethnicity with an oversampling of non-White physicians. Completed questionnaires were obtained from 978 of the 1,492 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 7 eligible specialist physicians (66 percent). There were no significant differences in the age, sex, race, or specialty between respondents and non-respondents to the specialist questionnaire. The primary care physicians surveyed in 1998 were initially selected and surveyed in 1996. Similar to the specialist survey, primary care physicians were drawn using a probability sample stratified by county and by physician race/ethnicity with an oversampling of non-White physi- cians. Primary care physicians were drawn from the same 13 counties in California as were used in the specialist survey. Primary care physicians sampled were those who listed their pri- mary specialty as family practice, general practice, general internal medicine, general pediatrics or obstetrics and gynecology. In the original 1996 sample, completed responses were obtained from 947 of 1,336 eligible primary care physicians (a response rate of 71 percent). Between 1996 and 1998, 71 primary care physicians became ineligible due to death, retirement, or re- location. In the 1998 survey wave, completed questionnaires were obtained from 713 of the 876 eligible primary care physicians (81 percent). (There were no significant differences in the demographic characteristics or baseline reports of involvement with the Medi-Cal program between respondents and non-respondents to the follow-up questionnaire.) Physician Questionnaire Survey items for both the specialist and primary care physicians included physician demo- graphics, practice setting, and characteristics of patients in practice. Physicians were asked whether they were taking any new patients and, if so, whether they were accepting any new Medi-Cal patients with managed care or fee-for-service insurance. Physicians were also asked a series of questions about their perceptions of Medi-Cal beneficiaries and Medi-Cal managed care. Specific questions from the 1998 survey instrument are in the Appendix. Medi-Cal Demographic Data Population data on the number and demographics of Medi-Cal beneficiaries in fee-for-service and managed care plans at the county and state level were obtained from the California Department of Health Services (DHS) Web site (www.dhs.ca.gov/mcss). Survey Data Analysis In the analysis, results were weighted to be generalizable to the overall population of physicians in the sampled specialties in the 13 study counties. Results were weighted by the inverse of the sampling fraction and the participation rate to account for oversampling of non-White physi- cians and differences in response rates among sampling strata. A comparison of the composite groups of medically based specialties (cardiology, endocrin- ology, gastroenterology, and neurology) versus the surgically based specialties (ophthalmology, 8 Medi-Cal Policy Institute orthopedics, and surgery) revealed no clear differences with regard to taking new Medi-Cal patients or attitudes toward Medi-Cal patients and Medi-Cal managed care. Thus, for com- parison with primary care physicians, all seven specialties were analyzed together as the cate- gory “specialists.” Similarly, initial analysis of the five primary care categories did not show clear patterns of difference; therefore, results from these five groups were combined for the group “primary care.” Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 9 10 Medi-Cal Policy Institute III. Findings A. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal Physician participation in the Medi-Cal program in 1998 was measured in three ways: (1) by whether physicians had any Medi-Cal patients in their practice; (2) by the percentage of Medi- Cal patients in physicians’ practices (practice concentration); and (3) by whether physicians who were accepting new patients were accepting new Medi-Cal patients in their practice. Physicians were further characterized by whether they participated in fee-for-service Medi-Cal only, Medi-Cal managed care only, or both. Overall, 55 percent of California physicians in the 13 study counties reported that they had Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 1). Similar percentages of primary care and special- ist physicians said they did not have any Medi-Cal patients in their practice (45 and 43 per- cent respectively). However, among those physicians with any Medi-Cal patients in their practice, specialist physicians were more likely than primary care physicians to have only Figure 1. Physicians with Any Medi-Cal Patients in Practice, 1998 a. Primary Care and Specialists b. Primary Care c. Specialists yyyy ;;;; Medi-Cal yyyy ;;;; Medi-Cal yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; FFS Only FFS Only Medi-Cal Do Not Do Not Do Not FFS Only yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; Participate 26% Participate 24% Participate 32% yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; 45% 45% 43% yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Manged Care Manged Care & FFS 20% & FFS 20% Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Manged Care Manged Care Manged Care Manged Care & FFS 20% Only 9% Only 11% Only 5% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 11 Figure 2. Medi-Cal Practice Concentration, 1998 Primary Care Specialists 50% 45% 40% Percent of Physicians 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0 0% 1–5% 6–10% 11–15% 16–20% >20% Medi-Cal Practice Concentration Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Medi-Cal fee-for-service patients; 31 percent of primary care physicians had Medi-Cal man- aged care patients in their practice, while only 25 percent of specialists did. The average concentration of Medi-Cal patients in surveyed physicians’ practices was 11 per- cent for primary care and 7 percent for specialist physicians. Among physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice, half reported that less than 5 percent of their practice was made up of Medi-Cal patients (Figure 2). Twice as many primary care physicians (16 percent) as specialist physicians (8 percent) reported that Medi-Cal patients made up more than 20 percent of their practice. This group of primary care physicians was largely comprised of physi- cians who worked in community-based clinics. Summing the number of visits primary care physicians provided to Med-Cal patients, begin- ning with the physicians who provided the most visits and moving toward those who provided the least, reveals that approximately 25 percent of primary care physicians provided 80 percent of primary care visits to Medi-Cal patients in 1998 (Figure 3). The pattern for physicians accepting new Medi-Cal patients was similar to that seen for physi- cians with any Medi-Cal patients in their practice. Among all surveyed physicians who were accepting any new patients, 43 percent did not accept new Medi-Cal patients (Figure 4). The percentages were similar for primary care and specialist physicians; however, specialist physi- cians were less likely than primary care physicians to accept new Medi-Cal managed care patients (35 versus 45 percent respectively). 12 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Figure 3. Distribution of Medi-Cal Visits Across Primary Care Physicians, 1998 100% 90% Percent of Total Medi-Cal Visits 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0 0 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Percent of Primary Care Physicians Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Figure 4. Physicians Accepting New Medi-Cal Patients, 1998 a. Primary Care and Specialists b. Primary Care c. Specialists yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; Accepting Accepting Accepting yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; Medi-Cal FFS Medi-Cal FFS Medi-Cal FFS Not Accepting Only 15% Not Accepting Only 11% Not Accepting Only 21% yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Medi-Cal 43% yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; 44% 44% yyyy ;;;; Accepting yyyy ;;;; Accepting yyyy ;;;; Accepting yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Manged Care Manged Care Manged Care & FFS 33% & FFS 35% & FFS 28% Accepting Accepting Accepting Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Manged Care Manged Care Manged Care Only 9% Only 10% Only 7% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Participation by Specialty Among the 11 physician specialties included in the survey, the percentage of physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice ranged from 40 percent for orthopedic surgeons to 67 percent for obstetrician-gynecologists (Figure 5). The high percentage of obstetrician- gynecologists with Medi-Cal patients in their practice most likely reflects the targeting of Medi-Cal benefits for pregnant women, while the high percentage of ophthalmologists (66 percent) may reflect the needs of low-income elderly patients who have dual coverage from Medicare and Medi-Cal. The concentration of Medi-Cal patients in physicians’ practices did not always correspond to the percentage of physicians in a specialty with any Medi-Cal patients. For example, although Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 13 Figure 5. Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice by Specialty, 1998 Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating Obstetrics-Gynecology 67% 20% Ophthalmology 67% 11% Gastroenterology 66% 10% Surgery 66% 14% Pediatrics 56% 25% Cardiology 55% 13% Neurology 54% 10% Family Practice 52% 17% Endocrinology 52% 13% Internal Medicine 49% 14% Orthopedic Surgery 40% 8% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 ophthalmology was one of the physician specialties with the highest percentages of physicians willing to accept Medi-Cal patients, ophthalmologists who participated in Medi-Cal had an average Medi-Cal caseload of only 11 percent. In contrast, participating pediatricians had an average of one-quarter of their patients covered by Medi-Cal. Judging by both the per- centage of physicians with any Medi-Cal patients in their practice and the mean concentration of Medi-Cal patients in the practices of participating physicians, orthopedic surgeons were the least available to Medi-Cal beneficiaries among the surveyed specialties. Participation by County The percentage of physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice varied across the 13 study counties (Figure 6). Only 38 percent of primary care physicians in Fresno had Medi-Cal patients in their practice, while in Alameda and Solano counties, 70 percent of primary care physicians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. There was a two-fold difference, 38 to 76 percent, in the participation rate among specialist physicians across the 13 counties. The mean concentration of Medi-Cal patients in physicians’ practices also varied by county (Figure 7). Among primary care physicians, the mean concentration of Medi-Cal patients in participating physicians’ practices ranged from a high of 35 percent in San Bernardino County to a low of 8 percent in Contra Costa County. There was also a four-fold difference in partic- ipating specialists’ practice concentration of Medi-Cal patients across counties, from an aver- age of 5 percent in Contra Costa County to 20 percent in Solano County. 14 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Figure 6. Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Their Practice by County, 1998 Primary Care Specialists 100% Percent of Physicians Participating in Medi-Cal 76% 75% 80% 71% 70% 70% 70% 67% 66% 65% 64% 64% 62% 58% 57% 55% 54% 54% 60% 53% 52% 47% 45% 43% 42% 41% 38% 40% 38% 20% 0 Alameda Fresno Orange Sacramento San Diego San Mateo Solano Contra Costa Los Angeles Riverside San Bernardino San Francisco Santa Clara County Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Figure 7. Medi-Cal Practice Concentration among Participating Physicians by County, 1998 Primary Care Specialists 40% 35% Average Medi-Cal Practice Concentration 35% 30% 25% 25% 22% 25% 22% 21% 20% 20% 20% 19% 18% 20% 15% 15% 13% 12% 12% 12% 15% 12% 11% 10% 10% 10% 9% 8% 8% 10% 5% 5% 0% Alameda Fresno Orange Sacramento San Diego San Mateo Solano Contra Costa Los Angeles Riverside San Bernardino San Francisco Santa Clara County Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 15 Medi-Cal Physician Equivalents The availability of physicians for Medi-Cal beneficiaries in a county is determined by the level at which physicians’ participate in the care of Medi-Cal patients and the overall supply of physicians in the county. To estimate the availability of primary care physicians for Medi-Cal beneficiaries in a county, we multiplied the mean concentration of Medi-Cal patients among all surveyed primary care physicians’ practices in a county by the total supply of primary care physicians in the county and divided this product by the total number of Medi-Cal bene- ficiaries in the county. We termed this product “Medi-Cal primary care physician equivalents.” A similar approach was taken to calculating Medi-Cal specialist physician equivalents, but in that case we used the mean concentration of Medi-Cal patients in surveyed specialist phy- sicians’ practices and the total supply of physicians in those same specialties at the county level. A complete count of the overall number of physicians in the surveyed specialties was obtained from the AMA Physician Masterfile. For purposes of comparison across counties, we stan- dardized the calculation of Medi-Cal physician equivalents per 100,000 Medi-Cal beneficia- ries in each county. As an additional benchmark, we calculated the overall number of primary care and specialist physicians in a county, regardless of whether or not they cared for Medi-Cal patients, per 100,000 residents in each county. Our calculations did not adjust for the number of hours a physician worked during a week. However, the supply of physicians for all county residents and Medi-Cal beneficiaries can be directly compared because there was no difference in the self-reported average number of hours worked by physicians who cared for Medi-Cal patients and those who did not. The mean number of primary care equivalents per 100,000 residents was on average a third lower for Medi-Cal beneficiaries (38 per 100,000) than it was for the population as a whole (56 per 100,000) (Table 1). Both ratios are below the workforce standard of 60 to 80 per 100,000, established by the Health Resources Services Administration. County ratios ranged from 14 (Fresno) to 72 (Alameda) Medi-Cal primary care equivalents per 100,000 Medi-Cal beneficiaries. The mean number of specialist physician equivalents per 100,000 persons was on average less than half for Medi-Cal beneficiaries (11 per 100,000) than it was for the population as a whole (27 per 100,000). Solano County had the lowest ratio of specialist physicians per 100,000 res- idents (11 per 100,000) but was the only county that had a greater ratio of specialist phy- sicians for Medi-Cal beneficiaries than for the population as a whole. County ratios ranged from 5 (Contra Costa) to 24 (San Francisco) Medi-Cal specialist equivalents per 100,000 Medi-Cal beneficiaries. 16 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Table 1. Physician Supply and Medi-Cal Physician Equivalents by Study County, 1998 Primary Care Specialists Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Primary Care Primary Care Specialist Specialist County Medi-Cal Physicians Equivalents per Physicians Equivalents per Population Population per 100,000 100,000 Medi-Cal per 100,000 100,000 Medi-Cal 7/98 6/98 Residents Beneficiaries Residents Beneficiaries Alameda 1,397,050 185,789 65 72 26 15 Contra Costa 917,970 88,106 57 22 25 5 Fresno 755,051 200,853 46 14 21 8 Los Angeles 9,223,807 1,723,815 58 31 29 10 Orange 2,723,782 246,201 62 57 29 14 Riverside 1,480,708 198,661 40 46 20 7 Sacramento 1,166,699 236,518 52 32 26 9 San Bernardino 1,635,967 282,696 37 42 15 7 San Diego 2,766,123 309,743 53 56 27 16 San Francisco 745,756 107,262 98 56 56 24 San Mateo 701,080 45,460 57 56 34 16 Santa Clara 1,641,848 157,094 61 44 27 11 Solano 376,748 44,807 48 54 11 14 Total 25,532,589 3,827,005 56 38 27 11 Sources: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 and American Medical Association Physician Masterfile B. Medi-Cal Physician Characteristics Primary care and specialist physicians with and without Medi-Cal patients in their practice were compared in terms of their demographics, non-English language skills, training, practice location, and whether they had uninsured patients in their practice. Among physicians partic- ipating in Medi-Cal, the mean concentration of Medi-Cal patients in the practices of physi- cians according to these characteristics is presented. Age In 1998, the majority of surveyed physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were 40 to 60 years old (Figure 8a). This reflected the overall age characteristics of surveyed physi- cians rather than the willingness of physicians of certain age groups to care for Medi-Cal pa- tients (Figure 8b). Among primary care physicians, physicians 40 to 60 years old were actually the least likely group to have any Medi-Cal patients in their practice (51 percent) (Figure 8c). Among specialists, increased age was associated with a decreased likelihood of having Medi- Cal patients in their practice (68 to 47 percent). Physicians younger than 40 years old were more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice than were older physicians. Sixty-nine Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 17 Figure 8. Medi-Cal Participation by Physician Age, 1998 a. Participating Physicians b. All Surveyed Physicians <40 Years <40 Years 10% 8% >60 Years >60 Years 26% 25% 40–60 Years 40–60 Years 64% 67% c. Percent of Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating 69% 14% Primary Care 51% 23% 62% 17% 68% 12% Specialists 58% 11% 47% 13% <40 Years 40–60 Years >60 Years Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 percent of primary care physicians and 68 percent of specialists less than 40 years old had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. The concentration of Medi-Cal patients was similar across age groups for specialists (a range of 11 percent to 13 percent), but it was almost twice as great for primary care physicians who were 40 to 60 years old (23 percent) as it was for primary care physicians who were less than 40 years old (14 percent). Gender While 58 percent of Medi-Cal beneficiaries are women, only 16 percent of the surveyed physi- cians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were female (Figure 9). The disproportion- ately low percentage of women physicians available to Medi-Cal beneficiaries reflects the low Figure 9. Medi-Cal by Gender, 1998 a. Beneficiaries b. Participating Physicians c. All Surveyed Physicians Female Female Male 16% 15% 42% Female Male Male 58% 84% 85% Sources: California Department of Health Services, Medical Care Statistics Section and UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 18 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Figure 10. Medi-Cal Participation by Physician Gender, 1998 Percent of Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating 58% 26% Primary Care 54% 18% 62% 12% Specialists 11% 56% Females Males Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 number of women physicians available to all patients and not an unwillingness on the part of female physicians to care for Medi-Cal patients. In fact, female primary care and specialist physicians were more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice than their male coun- terparts, and among physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice, women had a higher concentration of Medi-Cal patients in their practice than did men (Figure 10). Race and Ethnicity African Americans and Latinos comprise 55 percent of Medi-Cal beneficiaries, but only 8 percent of the participating Medi-Cal physicians who were surveyed in 1998 fall into these ethnic categories (Figure 11). As was the case with female physicians, the disproportionately low level of African American and Latino physicians available to Medi-Cal beneficiaries does not reflect an unwillingness on the part of minority physicians to care for Medi-Cal patients, but rather the disproportionately low numbers of African American and Latino physicians in the state. Even though White physicians were the largest racial group with Medi-Cal patients in their practice, they actually had the lowest percentage of participation and the lowest con- centration of Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 12). A higher percentage of African American, Asian, and Latino physicians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice than did White physicians. Figure 11. Medi-Cal by Race and Ethnicity, 1998 a. Beneficiaries b. Participating Physicians c. All Surveyed Physicians Other/Not African Other/Not African yy ;; yyyy ;;;; y ; African yyyy ;;;; y ; Other/Not American 13% Reported 2% American 4% Reported 2% American 3% Reported 11% yy ;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; y ; yyyy ;;;; y ; Asian/ Asian/ Asian/ yy ;; yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; y ; Pacific Islander yyyy ;;;; y ; Pacific Islander Pacific Islander 8% 26% 25% yyyy ;;;; yyyy ;;;; White 26% White Latino Latino Latino White 64% 4% 42% 4% 67% Sources: California Department of Health Services, Medical Care Statistics Section and UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 19 Figure 12. Medi-Cal Participation by Physician Race and Ethnicity, 1998 Percent of Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating 73% 39% 55% 28% Primary Care yyyyyyyyyyy ;;;;;;;;;;; 63% 29% yyyyyyyyyyy ;;;;;;;;;;; 51% 14% 61% 18% 68% 14% Specialists yyyyyyyyyyyy ;;;;;;;;;;;; 60% 16% yyyyyyyyyyyy ;;;;;;;;;;;; 57% y ; 10% African American Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Asian Latino y ; White Language In 1998, more than one-third of Medi-Cal benefi- Figure 13. Medi-Cal Beneficiaries ciaries reported that their primary language was not by Primary Language, 1998 English (Figure 13). The majority of non-English- Chinese Russian Other 0.6% yy ;; 1.1% 5.6% speaking beneficiaries in the state stated that their Vietnamese primary language was Spanish (27.7 percent), followed 2.8% yy ;; next by Vietnamese (2.8 percent), Chinese (1.1 per- yy ;; yy ;; Spanish English 27.7% cent), and Russian (0.6 percent). In comparison, 20 62.2% percent of all surveyed physicians reported that they speak Spanish; much smaller percentages of physicians 12.2% invalid or blank responses excluded reported that they speak Vietnamese (0.4 percent), Source: California Department of Health Services, Medical Care Statistics Section Chinese (6 percent) and Russian (0.7 percent). Phy- sicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were more likely to be Figure 14. Physician Language Fluency fluent in Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, by Medi-Cal Participation, 1998 or Russian (Figure 14). For example, Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients Physicians without Medi-Cal Patients 30% 25 percent of physicians who care for 25% Percent of Physicians Medi-Cal patients are fluent in Spanish as compared to 14 percent of physicians 20% who do not. 14% 10% The majority of physicians who care for 6% 5% Medi-Cal patients were able to provide 1% 0% 1% 0% 0% Spanish translation services either Spanish Chinese Vietnamese Russian themselves or through office staff (Table Physician Language Fluency 2). Twenty-nine percent of primary care Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 20 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Table 2. Language Skills of Participating Medi-Cal Physicians, 1998 Primary Care Specialists ”I speak ”Physician or office ”I speak ”Physician or office language fluently“ staff fluent/translates“ language fluently staff fluent/translates“ Spanish 29% 84% 19% 76% Chinese 7% 16% 6% 20% Vietnamese 1% 10% 1% 10% Russian 1% 4% 1% 9% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 physicians said that they were themselves fluent in Spanish and in combination with their of- fice staff, 84 percent of primary care practices could provide Spanish translation services. Al- though fewer specialists reported that they spoke Spanish, 76 percent of specialty physicians reported that, in combination with their office staff, they could provide Spanish language ser- vices in their practices. The overall numbers for physician and staff fluency in Chinese, Viet- namese, and Russian were lower than they were for Spanish. Because patients with these languages tend to be more geographically clustered than do Spanish-speaking patients, it is quite possible that many Medi-Cal patients are able to have these language needs met by their physician or the physician’s office staff. Board Certification Eighty-three percent of surveyed physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were board certified in their specialty (Figure 15), which is equivalent to the percentage of all sur- veyed physicians who were board certified. However, physicians who were not board certified provided a slightly greater amount of care to Medi-Cal patients. A higher percentage of non-board-certified primary care and specialist physicians reported having Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 16). For example, 62 percent of non-board-certified primary care physicians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice, compared to 53 percent of board-certified primary care physicians. In addition, the concentration of Medi-Cal patients was greater in the practices of physicians who are not board certified. Figure 15. Medi-Cal Participation by Board Certification Status, 1998 a. Participating Physicians b. All Surveyed Physicians Not Board Not Board Certified Certified 17% 16% Board Board Certified Certified 83% 84% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 21 Figure 16. Medi-Cal Participation by Physician Board Certification Status, 1998 Percent of Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating 53% 17% Primary Care 62% 30% 56% 11% Specialists 61% 16% Board-Certified Physicians Not Board-Certified Physicians Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 International Medical Graduates Approximately 30 percent of surveyed physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were International Medical Graduates (IMGs), which is slightly higher than the percentage of IMGs among all surveyed physicians (Figure 17). Primary care and specialist physicians who graduated from international medical schools were more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 18). For example, 70 percent of primary care IMGs had Medi-Cal pa- tients in their practice, as compared to only 50 percent of primary care physicians who gradu- ated from U.S. medical schools. In addition, the concentration of Medi-Cal patients in IMG physician practices was greater than in the practices of non-IMG physicians. Figure 17. Medi-Cal Participation by International Medical Graduate Status, 1998 a. Participating Physicians b. All Surveyed Physicians IMG IMG 29% 24% Non-IMG Non-IMG 71% 76% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Figure 18. Medi-Cal Participation by Physician IMG Status, 1998 Percent of Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating 50% 17% Primary Care 70% 27% 55% 10% Specialists 62% 15% Non-IMG Physicians IMG Physicians Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 22 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Practice Setting Virtually all surveyed physicians who worked at community clinics reported that they had Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 19). Group/staff model HMO physicians were less likely than solo and group practice physicians to participate in Medi-Cal; however, among those group/staff model HMO physicians who did participate, the concentration of Medi-Cal patients in their practice was similar to that found in solo and group practice physicians. This finding probably reflects the policies of the Kaiser Health Plan, in which the majority of group/staff model HMO physicians in California work. Kaiser physicians work in several, sep- arate sites around the state. Depending upon the county, Kaiser facilities either do not partic- ipate in Medi-Cal or participate at a high level. Figure 19. Medi-Cal Participation by Physician Practice Setting, 1998 Percent of Physicians with Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Mean % Medi-Cal in practice if participating Primary Care Solo 58% 18% Group Practice 61% 17% yyyyyyyy ;;;;;;;; Community Clinic 97% 53% Group/Staff HMO Specialists yyyyyyyy ;;;;;;;; 37% 20% Solo 56% 13% Group Practice 67% 11% yyy ;;; Community Clinic 100% 25% Group/Staff HMO yyy ;;; 14% 6% Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Combining information on the distribution of physicians according to their practice setting and the concentration of Medi-Cal patients in their practice reveals the central role that private physicians play in providing Medi-Cal care. Ninety-four percent of primary care phy- sicians participating in Medi-Cal reported that they worked in solo practice, group practice, or staff/group model HMOs. Eighty-nine percent of Medi-Cal primary care physician visits were in these settings (Figure 20). Physicians in community-based clinics provided a dis- proportionately large share of Medi-Cal visits. However, because this group of physicians constituted only 4 percent of the surveyed primary care physicians, their overall contribution to Medi-Cal primary care visits was only 10 percent. This finding is consistent with national statistics that found that visits by Medicaid patients to federally funded community clinics accounted for 14 percent of all primary care Medicaid visits.13 The contribution of community clinics to specialty care for Medi-Cal patients was even smaller because these sites focus almost exclusively on primary care. Among Medi-Cal participating specialists, 98 percent reported that they worked in solo, group practice, or staff/group model HMOs. Ninety-nine percent of Medi-Cal specialist visits were to physicians in these settings (Figure 21). The few primary care Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 23 Figure 20. Medi-Cal Primary Figure 21. Medi-Cal Specialist Care Physicians and Visits Physicians and Visits by by Practice Setting, 1998 Practice Setting, 1998 100% 2% 4% 1% 10% 100% 1% 3% 1% yyyyyy ;;;;;; 0% 2% 1% Other 16% 20% 80% 80% Community/ 54% 54% ;;;; ;; ;;;; Public Clinics 40% 60% 60% 35% Staff/Group Model HMO ;;;; ;;;; 40% 40% Group Practice 43% 41% 20% 38% 20% Solo Practice 34% 0 0 Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Visits Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Visits Primary Care to Primary Care Specialist to Specialist Physicians Physicians Physicians Physicians Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 and specialist physicians whose practice setting is described as “other” are those who reported working in school-based clinics, jails, and other less common settings. Providing Care to the Uninsured Surveyed physicians who said they provided care to Medi-Cal patients were more likely to care for uninsured patients than non-Medi-Cal physicians (Figure 22). Among primary care physi- cians, those who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice were almost twice as likely to have uninsured patients in their practice as those who did not participate in Medi-Cal. Among spe- cialists, the association between being a provider of Medi-Cal care and uninsured care was even greater than it was among primary care physicians. 24 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Figure 22. Physicians with Uninsured Patients in Practice, 1998 Physicians with Medi-Cal Physicians without Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Patients in Practice 80% 70% with Uninsured Patients 60% Percent of Physicians 51% 40% 28% 28% 20% 0% Primary Care Specialists Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 C. Physician Perceptions Physicians were asked to agree or disagree with a series of statements about their satisfaction with being a physician, the importance of their contribution to providing care in their com- munity, and their perceptions of the Medi-Cal program, Medi-Cal patients, and the Medi-Cal managed care program. Physician Satisfaction Approximately 80 percent of physicians surveyed in 1998 agreed that they were very or some- what satisfied with being a physician. This rating did not differ between physicians who did and did not have Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 23). Most primary care physicians (more than 90 percent) agreed that they were either very or somewhat satisfied with their patient population (Figure 24). There was little difference in this rating between those primary care physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice and those who did not. Specialist physicians were not asked this question. Community Contribution Primary care physicians were also asked to self-assess how essential their individual contribu- tion was to medical care in their community. Most primary care physicians did not think that their patients would go without care if they were not providing it, and this rating did not dif- fer between those physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice and those who did not (Figure 25). The one exception was primary care physicians who worked in community clinic settings; 72 percent of this group either somewhat or strongly agreed that some patients would go without care if they were not there. (Specialist physicians were not asked this question.) Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 25 Figure 23. “How satisfied are Figure 24. “How satisfied are you with you with being a physician?” the patient population you care for?” 0% 1% 100% 100% 6% 5% 7% 7% Very dissatisfied 14% 12% 80% 80% 42% Somewhat dissatisfied 36% 33% 33% 60% 60% Somewhat satisfied 40% 40% Very satisfied 56% 20% 50% 20% 51% 47% 0 0 Physicians with Physicians without Physicians with Physicians without Medi-Cal Patients Medi-Cal Patients Medi-Cal Patients Medi-Cal Patients (Question asked of both primary care and specialist physicians) (Question asked only of primary care physicians) Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Figure 25. “In the neighborhood where I practice, some of my patients would go without care if I weren’t there.” 100% 47% 37% 80% Strongly disagree 60% 33% Somewhat disagree 22% 40% Somewhat agree 23% Strongly agree 20% 21% 9% 8% 0% Physicians with Physicians without Medi-Cal Patients Medi-Cal Patients (Question asked only of primary care physicians) Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 26 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Perceptions about the Medi-Cal Program Primary care physicians were asked to rate their agreement with five statements about the Medi-Cal program (specialists were not asked this series of questions). Most primary care physicians reported negative views of the Medi-Cal program. In general, physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice had more negative opinions of Medi-Cal than physicians without Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 26). For example, 76 percent of primary care physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice said that it was difficult to obtain tests or specialty consults for Medi-Cal patients, compared to 67 percent of physicians without Medi-Cal patients in their practice. Figure 26. Primary Care Physician Perceptions about the Medi-Cal Program According to Medi-Cal Participation, 1998 No Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Medi-Cal Patients in Practice 100% 94% 89% 89% 87% 84% 81% Percent of Physicians Agreeing 80% 76% 70% 66% 67% 60% 40% 20% 0% Overall, the Medi- Medi-Cal provides It is difficult to Medi-Cal Burdensome paper- Cal program makes inadequate obtain tests or reimbursement is work makes it it difficult to care reimbursement specialty consults for frequently delayed difficult to care for for patients Medi-Cal patients or denied Medi-Cal patients Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Perceptions about Medi-Cal Patients Physicians were also asked to report their opinions about Medi-Cal patients by rating their agreement or disagreement with eight statements. Among all surveyed primary care and spe- cialist physicians, a majority agreed that Medi-Cal patients have complex clinical problems, complex psycho-social problems, and a need for extra time for explanations and education (Figure 27). More than two-thirds said that they believed Medi-Cal patients were noncompli- ant with recommended treatments. Finally, approximately one-quarter of primary care physi- cians and more than one-third of specialists reported that they believed that other patients were unsettled by having Medi-Cal patients in the waiting room and that Medi-Cal patients were ungrateful for care. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 27 Figure 27. Physician Perceptions about Medi-Cal Patients, 1998 Primary Care Specialists 100% 87% 82% 81% 81% 77% 80% 76% 72% Percent of Physicians Agreeing 68% 69% 67% 60% 48% 43% 37% 40% 40% 29% 25% 20% 0% They have They have Many don’t They require They are Other non-Medi- They are They increase complex complex speak English extra time for noncompliant Cal patients are ungrateful for the risk of clinical psycho-social explanations unsettled by care being sued problems problems and patient seeing them in education the waiting room Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Figure 28. Physician Perceptions about Medi-Cal Patients According to Medi-Cal Participation, 1998 No Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Medi-Cal Patients in Practice 100% 87% 87% 78% 77% 80% 77% 70% 72% 71% Percent of Physicians Agreeing 68% 64% 60% 47% 50% 40% 37% 35% 29% 31% 20% 0% They have They have Many don’t They require They are Other non-Medi- They are They increase complex complex speak English extra time for noncompliant Cal patients are ungrateful for the risk of clinical psycho-social explanations unsettled by care being sued problems problems and patient seeing them in education the waiting room Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 28 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Physicians’ opinions of Medi-Cal patients were not predictive of whether they participated in Medi-Cal (Figure 28). Physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice reported similar (and, in some cases, even more negative) views about Medi-Cal patients than did physicians without Medi-Cal patients in their practice. For example, 37 percent of physicians with Medi- Cal patients in their practices said that they believed other patients would be unsettled by see- ing Medi-Cal patients in the waiting room, as compared to 29 percent of physicians who did not care for Medi-Cal patients. Further analysis of physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice did not reveal any consistent pattern between Medi-Cal practice concentration and physicians’ opinions of Medi-Cal patients. Perceptions about Medi-Cal Managed Care The majority of surveyed physicians (72 percent of specialists and 52 percent of primary care physicians) agreed with the statement that Medi-Cal managed care was increasing the hassles associated with caring for Medi-Cal patients (Figure 29). However, half of the primary care physicians and one-third of the specialists indicated that managed care was improving the Medi-Cal program. A minority of primary care and specialist physicians agreed with state- ments that Medi-Cal managed care was improving reimbursement, making it easier to obtain tests and consultations, and increasing the number of Medi-Cal patients in their practice. Figure 29. Physician Perceptions about Medi-Cal Managed Care, 1998 Primary Care Specialists 100% Percent of Physicians Agreeing 80% 72% 60% 51% 52% 50% 49% 45% 39% 40% 35% 29% 28% 28% 19% 20% 0% Overall, managed Managed care is Medi-Cal managed Managed care is Managed care is The number of Medi- care is improving increasing the care is increasing decreasing delayed making it easier to Cal patients I care the Medi-Cal reimbursement I the hassles or denied Medi-Cal obtain tests and for is increasing as a program can receive from associated with payments specialty consults result of the intro- caring for Medi-Cal caring for Medi-Cal for Medi-Cal duction of Medi-Cal patients patients patients managed care Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 29 Figure 30. Physician Perceptions about Medi-Cal Managed Care According to Medi-Cal Participation, 1998 No Medi-Cal Patients in Practice Medi-Cal Patients in Practice 100% Percent of Physicians Agreeing 80% 65% 60% 52% 49% 48% 50% 42% 45% 40% 36% 34% 35% 25% 24% 20% 0% Overall, managed Managed care is Medi-Cal managed Managed care is Managed care is The number of Medi- care is improving increasing the care is increasing decreasing delayed making it easier to Cal patients I care the Medi-Cal reimbursement I the hassles or denied Medi-Cal obtain tests and for is increasing as a program can receive from associated with payments specialty consults result of the intro- caring for Medi-Cal caring for Medi-Cal for Medi-Cal duction of Medi-Cal patients patients patients managed care Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 Figure 31. Physician Perceptions about Medi-Cal Managed Care among Current Medi-Cal Physicians, 1998 Medi-Cal Managed Care in Practice Medi-Cal Fee-for-Service Only in Practice 100% Percent of Physicians Agreeing 80% 68% 64% 60% 53% 47% 43% 45% 40% 34% 34% 27% 23% 19% 20% 14% 0% Overall, managed Managed care is Medi-Cal managed Managed care is Managed care is The number of Medi- care is improving increasing the care is increasing decreasing delayed making it easier to Cal patients I care the Medi-Cal reimbursement I the hassles or denied Medi-Cal obtain tests and for is increasing as a program can receive from associated with payments specialty consults result of the intro- caring for Medi-Cal caring for Medi-Cal for Medi-Cal duction of Medi-Cal patients patients patients managed care Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 30 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Physicians’ opinions of Medi-Cal managed care were not associated with whether they had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. In fact, in some cases physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice expressed more negative opinions regarding Medi-Cal managed care. For example, 65 percent of physicians with Medi-Cal patients in their practice reported that Medi-Cal managed care was increasing the hassles associated with caring for Medi-Cal patients, as compared to 52 percent of physicians without Medi-Cal patients in their practice (Figure 30). Further analysis of physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice did not reveal any consistent pattern between Medi-Cal practice concentration and physicians’ opin- ions of Medi-Cal managed care. Physicians who had Medi-Cal managed care patients in their practice had more positive opin- ions of Medi-Cal managed care than did physicians who only cared for Medi-Cal patients who were in fee-for-service (Figure 31). For example, 53 percent of physicians who had Medi-Cal managed care patients in their practice agreed that managed care was improving the Medi-Cal program, while only 23 percent of physicians who accepted only Medi-Cal fee-for-service patients agreed with this statement. D. Changes between 1996 and 1998 Survey findings from 1998 were contrasted with findings from the 1996 survey to determine whether there were significant changes in Medi-Cal participation, Medi-Cal physician char- acteristics, and participation in Medi-Cal managed care during this time period. Changes in Primary Care Participation in Medi-Cal The overall percentage of primary care physicians participating in Medi-Cal was stable be- tween 1996 and 1998 (56 percent compared to 57 percent). However, there was some flux in individual physician participation in Medi-Cal during this time. Approximately 80 percent of the physicians who participated in the Medi-Cal program in 1996 were still doing so in 1998 (44 percent of the 56 percent in 1996 and 44 percent of the 57 percent in 1998) (Figure 32). However, 12 percent of primary care physicians who had accepted Medi-Cal patients in 1996 were no longer doing so in 1998, and 13 percent of primary care physicians who had not ac- cepted Medi-Cal patients in 1996 were doing so in 1998 (gray components of 1996 and 1998 bars respectively). The overall percentage of primary care physicians accepting new Medi-Cal patients decreased slightly over time (54 to 51 percent). More than 80 percent of the physi- cians who were accepting new Medi-Cal patients in 1996 were still doing so in 1998 (44 per- cent of 54 percent in 1996 and 44 percent of 51 percent in 1998). There was a small number of physicians who accepted only Medi-Cal managed care as opposed to Medi-Cal fee-for-ser- vice, but the number of such physicians did not increase after the expansion of mandatory Medi-Cal managed care. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 31 Figure 32. Primary Care Physician Reports of Medi-Cal Patients in Practice, 1996–1998 Percentage of physicians accepting Percentage of physicians accepting Medi-Cal in both 1996 and 1998 Medi-Cal in either 1996 or 1998 60% 57% 56% 54% 13% 51% 50% 12% 10% Percent of Primary Care Physicians 7% 40% 44% 44% 44% 44% 30% 20% 11% 10% 10% 5% 4% 6% 6% 0 1996 1998 1996 1998 1996 1998 Any Medi-Cal in Practice Accepting Any New Accepting New Medi-Cal Medi-Cal Patients Managed Care Only Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1996 and 1998 Changes in Physician Characteristics There were no significant differences between 1996 and 1998 in the gender, race/ethnicity, or specialty of physicians who participated in Medi-Cal (Table 3). However, primary care physicians who were older, non-board-certified, International Medical Graduates (IMGs), and in solo practice were more likely over time to participate in Medi-Cal. More primary care physicians working in community-based primary care clinics and, to a lesser extent, primary care physicians working in group/staff model HMOs participated in Medi-Cal in 1998 than did in 1996. A similar pattern of changes was seen when comparing physicians who were and were not accepting new Medi-Cal patients into their practice in 1996 and 1998 (data not shown). 32 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Table 3. Percentage of Primary Care Physicians by Medi-Cal Participation in 1996 and 1998 Yes in 1996 Yes in 1996 No in 1996 No in 1996 Net Change Yes in 1998 No in 1998 Yes in 1998 No in 1998 1996 vs. 1998 Age < 50 41 17 13 29 –4 ≥ 50 46 8 13 33 5 Gender Female 46 16 12 26 –4 Male 43 11 13 33 2 Race/Ethnicity Asian 51 6 9 33 3 African American 67 9 7 17 –2 Latino 55 10 9 26 –1 White 39 14 15 32 1 Specialty Family Practice 34 15 14 36 –1 Internal Medicine 36 13 14 36 1 Obstetrics/Gynecology 52 6 12 29 6 Pediatrics 57 12 10 21 –2 Board Certification Status Board Certified 41 14 14 31 0 Not Board Certified 56 3 9 33 6 International Medical Graduate Status IMG 59 5 13 23 8 Non-IMG 38 15 13 34 –2 Practice Setting Office Based 49 12 10 29 –2 Staff/Group Model HMO 24 14 20 42 6 Community Clinic 72 1 18 9 17 Other 56 19 0 25 –19 Practice Size Solo 52 4 13 31 9 2–10 53 14 8 25 –6 >10 29 18 16 37 –2 Income < $120,000 48 11 12 29 1 > $120,000 40 14 12 34 –2 Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1996 and 1998 Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 33 Changes in Medi-Cal Managed Care Participation Between 1996 and 1998, many counties in California shifted large proportions of Medi-Cal beneficiaries from fee-for-service Medi-Cal into managed care plans. The change in the per- centage of Medi-Cal beneficiaries who were enrolled in managed care ranged from 3 percent to 53 percent across the 13 study counties between 1996 and 1998. There was no association between the change in the percentage of primary care physicians in each county participating in Medi-Cal and the change in the percentage of Medi-Cal patients enrolled in managed care plans in the county (Figure 33). In other words, shifting Medi-Cal beneficiaries into managed care plans did not appear to result in more physicians participating in Medi-Cal. If anything, counties that increased the percentage of the Medi-Cal beneficiaries in managed care had a small decrease in the percentage of primary care physicians who had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. The seven counties that increased their percentage of Medi-Cal beneficiaries in man- aged care by more than 10 percent between 1996 and 1998 actually saw a 3 percent net decrease in the percentage of primary care physicians participating in Medi-Cal. On the other hand, the six counties that experienced less than a 10 percent increase in the penetration of Medi-Cal managed care had no net change in the percentage of primary care physicians par- ticipating in Medi-Cal. Controlling for the absolute percentage of Medi-Cal managed care in the baseline year and the length of time that the Medi-Cal managed care program was in effect in a county did not alter the results. Figure 33. Association between Change in Medi-Cal Participation and Managed Care Penetration at County Level, 1996–1998 20% Change in Percentage of Primary Care Physicians in County 10% with Any Medi-Cal in Practice 0% -10% -20% -10% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% County Change in Medi-Cal Managed Care Penetration, July 1996 to January 1998 Source: UCSF Survey of California Physicians, 1998 34 Medi-Cal Policy Institute IV. Conclusions The Medi-Cal program has made considerable improvement in access to care for the low- income population in California, but Medi-Cal beneficiaries continue to experience barriers to care, including a shortage of physicians who will accept Medi-Cal patients. Based on surveys of primary care and specialist physicians working in the 13 largest urban counties in Califor- nia, we found that little more than half of physicians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice in 1998. A similar percentage of physicians who were accepting any new patients were accept- ing new Medi-Cal patients in their practice. There was a wide range of physician participation in the care of Medi-Cal patients across study counties. However, studies have shown that phy- sician participation in the care of Medi-Cal patients is substantially lower in California than it is in several other urban areas around the United States.14 While a similar percentage of California primary care and specialist physicians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice in 1998, the concentration of Medi-Cal patients in primary care practices was greater than that in specialist practices. In addition, there were fewer primary care and specialist physicians available to Medi-Cal patients than there were for the population as a whole. On average, there were about two-thirds as many primary care physicians and about half as many specialist physicians available to Medi-Cal patients as were available for the population as a whole. The characteristics of physicians who care for Medi-Cal patients were found to be similar to those of physicians who do not, with some potentially important differences. Physicians from underrepresented minority groups, and those who have non-English-speaking skills, most commonly Spanish, were more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice. Not only were about a third of primary care physicians able to speak Spanish themselves, but almost three-quarters could provide Spanish translation in conjunction with on-site staff. Because nearly 30 percent of Medi-Cal beneficiaries speak Spanish, the disproportionate involvement Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 35 of these physicians in the Medi-Cal program most likely plays an important role in providing culturally competent care to Medi-Cal patients. Physicians who are not board certified and who are International Medical Graduates were also found to be disproportionately more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice. These findings may suggest differences in the quality of physicians that are available to Medi-Cal patients. Physicians who work in clinics were more likely than physicians who work in other settings to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice. These results apply predominantly to primary care physicians as there were very few specialists who reported that their practice setting is a clinic. Physicians who work in clinics reported a substantially higher concentration of Medi-Cal patients in their practice and they stated that many patients would go without care in their communities were they not there. While physicians who work in clinics most likely play an important role in providing access to care in their communities, the relatively small number of physicians who worked in these settings in urban areas in 1998 results in the overwhelming majority of Medi-Cal patients seeing physicians who worked in office-based settings. Many physicians expressed negative attitudes about the Medi-Cal program and, to a lesser de- gree, about Medi-Cal patients. However, these attitudes did not predict whether or not physi- cians had Medi-Cal patients in their practice. In general, physicians who cared for Medi-Cal patients were no more or less satisfied with their practice. Specialist physicians expressed more negative attitudes about Medi-Cal managed care than did primary care physicians. These atti- tudes are reflected in the finding that specialist physicians involvement with Medi-Cal is much more likely to be in fee-for-service than managed care. The growth of Medi-Cal managed care between 1996 and 1998 was not associated with a change in the number of primary care physicians caring for Medi-Cal patients. By and large, there was little change over time in which primary care physicians were providing this care. There was, however, a small increase over time in the likelihood that non-board-certified and International Medical Graduate physicians would be caring for Medi-Cal patients. These results are some of the most comprehensive available about physicians’ participation in the Medi-Cal program; however, there are some limitations to note in drawing conclusions from them. First, these data are derived from physicians’ self-reports and therefore may not ac- curately reflect physicians’ actual practice. Second, the surveyed physicians practice in urban areas and, as a result, we have no way of judging whether the results apply equally to phy- sicians who practice in rural areas. Third, information regarding changes in physicians’ prac- tice over time was only available for primary care physicians. Since specialists reported more negative attitudes than primary care physicians about Medi-Cal managed care, their practice with Medi-Cal patients over time may not be the same as that of primary care physicians. Finally, all data were collected in 1998 and may not reflect more recent practice changes among California physicians. 36 Medi-Cal Policy Institute To address many of these limitations, investigators at the University of California, San Fran- cisco, with the support of the Medi-Cal Policy Institute, are in the process of collecting up- dated information regarding California physicians’ practices with Medi-Cal patients. In addition to providing a longitudinal follow up of the primary care and specialist physicians de- scribed in the present report, the sample has been enhanced to incorporate additional primary care and specialist physicians, including those working in rural areas in California. These data will be collected by the close of 2001 with an anticipated release of the results in 2002. Even before the updated results from the 2001 California Physician Survey are available, several pol- icy recommendations can be made based on the current information. First, California needs to reconsider its strategies for increasing physician participation in the Medi-Cal program. Managed care does not appear to have significantly increased physicians’ willingness to care for Medi-Cal patients. Since California’s Medi-Cal physicians receive some of the lowest rates of reimbursement in the country, some have suggested that increasing these fees will need to be a part of the solution. However, results from studies of other states that have taken this approach suggest that this will have only a limited effect. Judging by some of the concerns physicians have regarding the administrative hassles with the program, it may be that addressing these issues could contribute toward increasing physicians’ involvement with the program. Education programs that address physicians’ misconceptions about Medi-Cal patients, such as that they are more likely to sue when in fact they are less likely to do so, might also affect physicians’ participation in Medi-Cal. Second, the diversity of California’s Medi-Cal patient population suggests that there is a need for a culturally competent physician workforce to care for them. Physicians from underrepre- sented minority groups are more likely to have Medi-Cal patients in their practice and they may also be better able to provide culturally appropriate care to diverse patient populations. However, the number of minorities in the physician workforce remains disproportionately small. Medi-Cal has an interest in having a diverse physician workforce available to care for its clients; therefore, the program should consider how it can contribute toward the development of a diverse physician workforce in California. Third, there should be an on-going public commitment to evaluate strategies that are under- taken to improve the Medi-Cal program. Despite the significant changes in the Medi-Cal pro- gram during the 1990s, including a large increase in the use of managed care, there has been very little information by which to judge the successes and failures of these delivery changes. Medi-Cal represents a significant expenditure of public money and, for this reason, the public should have the opportunity to receive information on how effectively the program is meeting its goals. There is a need for on-going studies of Medi-Cal’s performance and a commitment to publicly disseminate the results in a timely fashion. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 37 Appendix: Survey Instrument Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 39 40 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 41 42 Medi-Cal Policy Institute Notes 1. Perloff J.D., P.R. Kletke, J.W. Fossett, and S. Banks. 1997. “Medicaid Participation Among Urban Primary Care Physicians.” Medical Care 35 (2); 142-157. 2. 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Gifford B. 1997. “Obstetricians’ Receptiveness to Teen Prenatal Patients Who Are Medicaid Recipients.” Health Services Research 32; 265-82. 9. Skaggs D.L., S.M. Clemens, M.G Vitale, J.D. Femino, and R.M. Kay. 2001. “Access to Orthopedic Care for Children with Medicaid Versus Private Insurance in California.” Pediatrics 107; 1405-1408. 10. Mitchell J.B. 1991. “Physician Participation in Medicaid Revisited.” Medical Care 29 (7); 645-653. 11. California Department of Health Services, Medical Care Statistics Section. 2000. Medi-Cal Beneficiaries by Managed Care Plan (historical), Vol. 2000. (http://www.dhs.ca.gov/MCSS/RequestedData/HCPXmonth/ HCPXmonth.htm) 12. California Department of Finance. County Population Projections With Age, Sex, and Race/ethnic Detail. Sacramento, CA: December 1998. (http://www.dof.ca.gov/html/Demograp/Proj_age.htm) 13. Forrest C.B., E. Whelan. 2000. “Primary Care Safety-Net Delivery Sites in the United States: A Com- parison of Community Health Centers, Hospital Outpatient Departments, and Physicians’ Offices.” JAMA 284 (16); 2077-2083. 14. Perloff J.D., P.R. Kletke, J.W. Fossett, and S. Banks. 1997. “Medicaid Participation Among Urban Primary Care Physicians.” Medical Care 35 (2); 142-157. Physician Participation in Medi-Cal, 1996 –1998 43